In this issue of Blood, Fields and colleagues demonstrate that patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) on hydroxyurea have lower cerebral oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) than similar patients not receiving disease-modifying therapy.1  Although hydroxyurea has become the standard of care for young children with SCD, its ability to protect the white matter from silent strokes remains unknown. In the Créteil cohort, SCD patients had access to regular TCD screening since birth, and hydroxyurea was routinely administered to children with frequent vasoocclusive crises. Despite this, the prevalence of silent strokes was 37.4% by the age of 14 in this cohort.2  With the increasing use of hydroxyurea, in lieu of transfusion therapy, for SCD patients with abnormal transcranial Doppler results,3  there is appropriate anxiety about hydroxyurea’s cerebral protection.

Plot of 2 hypothetical hemoglobin dissociation curves derived from the Hill equation and p50 values of 29.6 (solid line) and 28.6 (dotted line). The horizontal and vertical axes have been interrupted to highlight the small differences in oxygen saturation observed under both arterial and cerebral capillary pO2 values. OEF can be calculated as the difference in oxygen saturation under arterial oxygen conditions (pO2 95 mm Hg) and at the cerebrovascular capillary level (pO2 33 mm Hg). The left-shifted hemoglobin dissociation curve (dashed line) yields a lower OEF (41.4%) than the unshifted curve (OEF 43.3%), despite identical tissue pO2 levels. Thus, OEF, in isolation cannot be considered a marker of cerebrovascular risk.

Plot of 2 hypothetical hemoglobin dissociation curves derived from the Hill equation and p50 values of 29.6 (solid line) and 28.6 (dotted line). The horizontal and vertical axes have been interrupted to highlight the small differences in oxygen saturation observed under both arterial and cerebral capillary pO2 values. OEF can be calculated as the difference in oxygen saturation under arterial oxygen conditions (pO2 95 mm Hg) and at the cerebrovascular capillary level (pO2 33 mm Hg). The left-shifted hemoglobin dissociation curve (dashed line) yields a lower OEF (41.4%) than the unshifted curve (OEF 43.3%), despite identical tissue pO2 levels. Thus, OEF, in isolation cannot be considered a marker of cerebrovascular risk.

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Cerebral OEF represents the amount of oxygen removed from hemoglobin as it returns from the brain. OEF will increase whenever oxygen delivery is compromised or metabolic activity increases. The difference between resting OEF and maximum OEF is the extraction reserve. Cerebral blood flow will also increase in response to elevated metabolic demand, where the ratio of maximum to resting cerebral blood flow is the cerebrovascular flow reserve. Both of these mechanisms protect the brain from ischemic damage.

The magnetic resonance imaging technique used by the authors, asymmetric spin echo, exploits the magnetic differences between oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin to estimate OEF. It offers similar tissue oxygenation information as provided by cerebral near-infrared spectroscopy, but provides markedly improved spatial localization. Using asymmetric spin echo, the authors have previously documented that silent strokes colocalize with regions of increased tissue OEF4  in deep white matter structures located in watershed areas. Recent results corroborate these findings: cerebral blood flow and oxygen delivery are lowest in these regions.5  Tissue OEF is inversely proportional to hemoglobin level4,6  and improves following exchange transfusion.6  The authors conclude that tissue OEF therefore represents a marker of metabolic stress and a direct risk factor for white matter injury.

However, as intuitive and compelling as these arguments are, it is critical to appreciate the challenges of comparing OEF across study populations. The brain regulates its blood flow to maintain adequate oxygen tension (pO2), not its blood oxygen saturation.7  Normal cerebral pO2 is ∼33 mm Hg.8  The OEF for any given brain pO2 will be governed by a patient’s particular oxygen dissociation curve. For example, consider the 2 hemoglobin dissociation curves (see figure). The dashed curve has a p50 of 28.6 mm Hg, and the solid curve has a p50 of 29.6 mm Hg. At normal arterial oxygen tensions (95 mm Hg), there is <1% saturation difference between the 2 curves. However, the solid curve is significantly more efficient at unloading oxygen to the brain tissue, leading to lower tissue oxygen saturation and higher calculated OEF. Although the extraction reserve is lower for the solid curve (compared with the dashed curve), the flow reserve is higher because less cerebral blood flow is required to support any given cerebral metabolic demand. Thus, p50 alters the balance between extraction and flow reserves but does not fundamentally change tissue pO2 (within a homeostatic range).

There are many factors that shift the hemoglobin dissociation curve. Fetal hemoglobin has a p50 ∼22.8 mm Hg (left shift), and sickle hemoglobin has a p50 ∼30.3 (right shift).9  Anemia right shifts p50 ∼0.3 mm Hg per gram of hemoglobin through upregulation of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (DPG),10  whereas transfused blood is left shifted because of 2,3-DPG degradation during storage.10  In the Fields paper, the hydroxyurea cohort has less anemia, more fetal hemoglobin, and less hemoglobin S than the nonhydroxyurea-treated cohort; thus, a lower OEF is expected based on p50 considerations alone. The curves in were derived using literature p50 values (see figure), and hemoglobin electrophoresis results from the paper, simple mixture assumptions and idealized hemoglobin dissociation parameters for the hydroxyurea treated (dashed curve) and untreated (solid curve) patients. The predicted OEFs of 41.6% and 43.5% are surprisingly close to the observed values of 40.9% and 42.9%, respectively.

Does this mean that the decreased OEF in the Fields study is unimportant? Far from it. Although the hemoglobin left shift with hydroxyurea inhibits oxygen unloading (which could have negative consequences to the brain), it is balanced by the increase in oxygen-carrying capacity due to the elevated hemoglobin levels. Increased hemoglobin in the hydroxyurea-treated patients allows normal brain metabolism despite lower cerebral blood flow and lower OEF, thus preserving both compensatory arms of brain oxygenation.

A key point of this commentary, however, is to emphasize that OEF cannot be considered a marker of brain risk in isolation. If hydroxyurea produced a left shift without its beneficial effects of increased hemoglobin level, it could be deleterious, despite improving OEF values. The brain would be forced to increase its flow to maintain normal pO2 levels, placing more hemodynamic stress on the vasculature and further exhausting cerebrovascular flow reserve. This is not an idle thought experiment because there are ongoing clinical trials using agents that increase hemoglobin oxygen affinity. Success of any hemoglobin-dissociation curve modifying agents will depend on their ability to both improve functional oxygen carrying capacity and balance the increased difficulty of oxygen unloading. Changes in OEF can only be interpreted in parallel with changes in brain oxygen delivery,5  effectively creating maps of tissue oxygen utilization.

A second key point is the emerging theme that anemia, by itself, is fundamentally damaging to the brain. Anemia triggers compensatory cerebral hyperemia, leaving little ability to vasodilate further in response to metabolic stress. Anemia also depletes the oxygen extraction reserve, removing the fastest compensatory response to acute hypoxia. In the present study, and several other works not cited here, hemoglobin level is the key determinant of white matter risk not hemoglobin S percentage. As a result, we may need to reconsider our comfort level with hemoglobin levels previously thought to be safe.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: J.C.W. is a consultant for bluebird bio, WorldCare Clinical, ApoPharma, Celgene, Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Silence Therapeutics, and Biomed Informatics; has received grant funding from the National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; and research support in-kind from Philips Healthcare.

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