Breaking the cycle Targeting the interplay between red blood cells and inflammation in sickle cell disease

Open Access
Authors
  • L.A. de Ligt
Supervisors
  • C.J. Fijnvandraat
  • B.J. Biemond
Cosupervisors
  • E. Nur
  • R. van Bruggen
Award date 04-06-2026
ISBN
  • 9789465229485
Number of pages 335
Organisations
  • Faculty of Medicine (AMC-UvA)
Abstract
Despite being the most common inherited hematological disorder, treatment options for sickle cell disease (SCD) remain limited. While recent advances in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and gene therapy offer promising avenues, most patients cannot access these interventions. This highlights the urgent need for widely available, affordable disease-modifying therapies, alongside optimization of established treatments such as red blood cell (RBC) transfusion. Part I of this thesis focuses on improving RBC transfusion strategies for patients with SCD. It explores various approaches to optimization, including a reassessment of transfusion indications and strategies to prolong the survival of donor RBCs post-transfusion. Part II delves into the pathophysiology of SCD, with a particular emphasis on chronic inflammation and oxidative stress, aiming to identify potential targets for novel therapeutic interventions. Collectively, the studies presented in this thesis provide new insights for enhancing RBC transfusion strategies and for guiding the development of innovative disease-modifying therapies for patients with SCD.
Document type PhD thesis
Note Please note that the sections 'About the author' and 'Dankwoord' are not included in the thesis downloads.
Language English
Downloads
Thesis (Embargo up to 2028-06-04)
Chapter 3: Red blood cell survival in sickle cell disease: explaining interindividual heterogeneity (Embargo up to 2028-06-04)
Chapter 9: Alterations in clot characteristics in sickle cell disease are mediated by ICAM-4 and normalized by red blood cell transfusions (Embargo up to 2028-06-04)
Supplementary materials
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