Weekly SCD Practice Update

An international multicenter cohort shows sickle cell disease is no longer uniformly associated with low body weight, with persistent undernutrition alongside increasing overweight and obesity across age groups, genotypes, and countries.

Crawford Strunk, M.D., Angela Rivers, M.D., PhD, Catherine Segbefia, MBChB, Raffaella Colombatti, M.D., PhD, Immacolata Tartaglione, M.D., PhD, Deepa Manwani, M.D., Eugenia Vicky Asare, MBChB, Connie M Piccone, M.D., Donna Boruchov, M.D., William T Zempsky, M.D., Gifty Dankwah Boatemaa, M.S., Sudha Mahesh Ramachandra Rao, MBBS, Sophia Akatue, M.S., Bianca Oteng, M.S., Ahmed Owda, M.D., Rose Bamfo, M.D., Samuel R Wilson, M.D., Fatimah Farooq, MPH, Rebekah Urbonya, B.S., John Barber, M.S., Fredericka Sey, MBChB, Baba Inusa, MBBS, Charles Antwi-Boasiako, PhD, Biree Andemariam, M.D., Andrew D Campbell, M.D.

Key Findings

  • Purpose
    To characterize body mass index (BMI) distribution and associated clinical factors in individuals with sickle cell disease across diverse global settings.
  • Population
    532 patients with SCD from the multinational CASiRe cohort (United States, Italy, and Ghana) spanning pediatric and adult care.
  • Headline Result
    • Underweight affected 9.5% of pediatric/adolescent patients and 17.2% of adults, highest in severe genotypes (SS/SB0Thal) and in Ghana.
    • Overweight/obesity reached 26.8% in adults (vs 14% pediatrics), peaking at 49% in HbSC and 32% among individuals receiving hydroxyurea.
    • BMI distribution varied by country, age, genotype severity, and treatment exposure, consistent with an evolving nutritional phenotype in SCD.
  • Why It Matters
    SCD care has historically focused on growth failure and undernutrition; clinicians now encounter a dual nutritional burden that may influence cardiometabolic risk, organ complications, and long-term outcomes.
  • Evidence Gaps & Limitations
    Cross-sectional design limits causal inference; dietary intake, socioeconomic contributors, and longitudinal metabolic outcomes were not evaluated.

Source: Journal of Sickle Cell Disease — “International variations in body mass index within the CASiRe global cohort of sickle cell disease patients

Regulatory & Guideline Watch

Current SCD guidelines emphasize organ-specific complications such as renal and cardiopulmonary disease, but lack SCD-specific obesity assessment and management protocols, despite obesity emerging as a risk factor alongside persistent undernutrition.