Active spread of β‐thalassemia beyond the thalassemia belt: A study on a Russian population

Author:

Shchemeleva Ekaterina1,Salomashkina Valentina V.1,Selivanova Daria1,Tsvetaeva Nina2,Melikyan Anait3,Doronina Liliya145,Surin Vadim L.1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Genetic Engineering National Medical Research Center for Hematology Moscow Russia

2. Department of Orphan Diseases National Medical Research Center for Hematology Moscow Russia

3. Department for Standardization of Treatments of Hematological Diseases National Medical Research Center for Hematology Moscow Russia

4. Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity University of Münster Münster Germany

5. JICE – Joint Institute for Individualisation in a Changing Environment University of Münster Münster Germany

Abstract

Abstractβ‐Thalassemia is a disease traditionally associated with thalassemia belt countries. Nonetheless, as global migration intensifies, β‐thalassemia–causing variants spread far from their origin. We investigated this process to detect some patterns underlying its course. We analyzed β‐thalassemia–causing variants and the origin of 676 unrelated participants in Moscow, the largest city of Russia, far away from the thalassemia belt. Our analyses revealed that modern Russia has one of the broadest spectra of thalassemia‐causing variants: 46 different variants, including two novel β0 variants. Only a small proportion of the reported pathogenic variants likely originated in the resident subpopulation. Almost half of the variants that supposedly had emerged outside the Russian borders have already been assimilated by (were found in) the resident subpopulation. The primary modern source of immigration transferring thalassemia to a nonthalassemic part of Russia is the Caucasus region. We also found traces of ancient migration flows from non‐Caucasus countries. Our data indicate that β‐thalassemia–causing variants are actively spilling over into resident populations of countries outside thalassemia belt regions. Therefore, viewing thalassemia as a disease exclusive to specific ethnic groups creates a mind trap that can complicate the diagnosis.

Publisher

Wiley

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