When patients sit down with me to talk about starting a family, the genetics piece is the part that feels most overwhelming. Let me make it simple โ through three families I've seen versions of in clinic.
Maria and Saanjh โ both have sickle cell trait. They're newlyweds. Maria carries one sickle gene; Saanjh carries one sickle gene. With every pregnancy, the math shakes out the same way:
- 25% chance the baby has neither trait nor disease (HbAA โ completely normal)
- 50% chance the baby has sickle cell trait (HbAS โ like Mom and Dad)
- 25% chance the baby has sickle cell anemia (HbSS โ full disease)
That last one is the conversation worth having. Genetic counseling, prenatal options, and early intervention plans all start here.
Kwame and Nancy โ one has hemoglobin C trait, one has sickle cell trait. Their first child inherited two normal genes โ perfectly healthy, no trait. With every future pregnancy, though, the odds reset:
- 25% chance of HbAA (no trait, no disease)
- 25% chance of sickle cell trait (HbAS)
- 25% chance of hemoglobin C trait (HbAC)
- 25% chance of HbSC disease โ a form of sickle cell disease that can be milder than HbSS but still requires lifelong care.
Many families don't realize that sickle cell plus a different hemoglobin variant still produces disease. Hemoglobin C trait alone is silent โ but paired with sickle, it becomes SCD.
Nia and Kiano โ one has beta-thalassemia trait, one has sickle cell trait. With every pregnancy:
- 25% normal
- 25% sickle cell trait
- 25% beta-thalassemia trait
- 25% HbS beta-thalassemia โ another form of sickle cell disease.
The takeaway across all three families: any combination of two abnormal hemoglobin genes can produce sickle cell disease. That's why "we tested for sickle cell and we're fine" sometimes isn't enough. A full hemoglobin panel โ electrophoresis or HPLC โ tells the complete story.
What to do if any of these stories sound like yours. Get screened. Bring the results to a genetic counselor. Walk through the options together. There is no wrong choice โ there is only an informed one.
โ Dr. Rob
๐ Resource: CDC Get Screened for Sickle Cell Trait โ Know Your Status infographic.