Background: A beta-thalassemia intermedia phenotype can be caused by multiple genotypes.
Methods: We studied a family where the mother was hematologically normal and both father and daughter had beta-thalassemia intermedia.
Results: Both affected individuals were heterozygous for a codon 39 CAG-to-TAG mutation. They also were heterozygous for a triplicate alpha-globin gene locus (alphaalphaalpha(anti 3.7)).
Conclusions: This compound heterozygous condition of a beta39 C-to-T mutation and triplicate alpha-globin gene increases alpha:beta-globin chain imbalance and accounts for the presence of beta-thalassemia intermedia. The proband received both an abnormal beta-globin gene and a triplicate alpha-globin locus from her father. Although the phenotype seems to be dominantly inherited, because of independent segregation of the alpha- and beta-globin genes, it is more accurately an example of polygenic inheritance.