Comparison of Oral and Parenteral Iron Administration on Iron Homeostasis, Oxidative and Immune Status in Anemic Neonatal Pigs

2019 ◽  
Vol 195 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenglin Dong ◽  
Dan Wan ◽  
Guanya Li ◽  
Yiming Zhang ◽  
Huansheng Yang ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Pierelli ◽  
◽  
Alessandro De Rosa ◽  
Mauro Falco ◽  
Elsie Papi ◽  
...  

Background: Low preoperative haemoglobin is frequently observed in heart surgery patients and is associated with a significant decrease in haemoglobin between post-operative days 2 and 3, known as haemoglobin drift. Overall, these patients tend to receive many RBC transfusions. Since iron homeostasis is often impaired in these patients, restoration of iron availability might override iron-restricted erythropoiesis. However, reduced tolerance to oral iron salts has limited this strategy to intravenous iron administration. Study Design and Methods: The purpose of this study was to assess whether preoperative supplementation with oral sucrosomial iron, a new iron-delivery technology with improved tolerance and bioavailability, might be an effective strategy for this patient population. One thousand consecutive patients were randomized and received either a one-month course of sucrosomial iron (60 mg/day) or no treatment prior to elective heart surgery at a single high-volume centre (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03560687). Primary end-points were haemoglobin concentration on the day of hospital admittance and number of blood transfusions. Secondary end-points were haemoglobin drift, tolerance of treatment and cost-effectiveness of sucrosomial iron administration. Results: Baseline haemoglobin in the treatment group was higher (by 0.67 g/dL; p<0.001) than that in the control group. The percentage of patients in the treatment group who required transfusion (35.4%) was half that in the control group (64.6%). The average number of transfused units per operation was 0.95 vs. 2.03 in the treatment and control groups, respectively. Haemoglobin drift was substantially similar in the two groups, and the tolerability of treatment was excellent (98%). The overall cost of treatment was 156 Euros less in the treatment group, expressed as a raw cost of transfusion. Conclusion: In elective heart surgery, routine preoperative sucrosomial iron administration seems to be a safe, well-tolerated and cost-effective strategy to increase preoperative haemoglobin and reduce the need for allogeneic blood transfusions.


Blood ◽  
1950 ◽  
Vol 5 (11) ◽  
pp. 983-1008 ◽  
Author(s):  
CLEMENT A. FINCH ◽  
MARK HEGSTED ◽  
THOMAS D. KINNEY ◽  
E. D. THOMAS ◽  
CHARLES E. RATH ◽  
...  

Abstract On the basis of experimental and clinical observations and a review of the literature, a concept of the behavior of storage iron in relation to body iron metabolism has been formulated. Storage iron is defined as tissue iron which is available for hemoglobin synthesis when the need arises. This iron is stored intracellularly in protein complex as ferritin and hemosiderin. It would appear that wherever the cell is functionally intact, such iron is available for general body needs. Iron is transported by a globulin of the serum to and from the various tissues of the body to satisfy their metabolism. Surplus iron carried by this iron-binding protein is deposited chiefly in the liver. Storage iron may be increased in two ways. The first mechanism results from the inability of the body to excrete significant amounts of iron. Because of this, any decrease in circulating red cell iron (any anemia other than blood loss or iron deficiency anemia) is accompanied by a shift of iron to the tissue compartment. The total amount of body iron remains constant and is merely redistributed. This is to be contrasted with the absolute increase in body iron and enlarged iron stores which follow excessive iron absorption or parenteral iron administration. Enlarged iron stores in either instance may be evaluated by examination of sternal marrow or determination of the serum iron and saturation of the iron binding protein In states of iron excess, differences in initial distribution are observed, depending on the route of administration and type of iron compound employed. Iron absorbed from the gastro-intestinal tract and soluble iron salts injected in small amounts are transported by the iron-binding protein of the serum and stored predominantly in the liver. Colloidal iron given intravenously is taken up by the reticulo-endothelial tissue. Erythrocytes appear to localize in greatest concentration in the spleen, while greater amounts of hemoglobin iron are found in the renal parenchyma. These latter differences in distribution reflect the capacity of various body tissues to assimilate different iron compounds, which while present in the plasma are not carried by the iron-binding protein. Over a period of time an internal redistribution of iron from these various sites occurs through the serum iron compartment. The liver becomes progressively loaded with iron. When the capacity of the liver to store iron is exceeded, the serum iron increases and secondary tissue receptors begin to fill with iron. That iron in large amounts is toxic to tissues is suggested by the occurrence of fibrosis in the organs most heavily laden with iron. This sequence of events, whether following excessive iron absorption or parenteral iron administration is believed to be responsible for the clinical and pathologic picture of hemochromatosis.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 2699-2699
Author(s):  
Yelena Z. Ginzburg ◽  
Radma Mahmood ◽  
Steven Brunnert ◽  
Mary E. Fabry ◽  
Ronald L. Nagel

Abstract Despite the use of transfusion and iron chelation therapy, patients with β-thalassemia major have a shortened life expectancy. Many of those deaths are attributable to cardiac iron overload. Nevertheless, the process by which cardiac iron overload occurs is not well understood. We have used the homozygous βmajor deletion [Hbbth-1] (THL) mouse model to assess hepatic and cardiac iron load. RBC indices for 3 THL mice and 2 C57BL/6 wildtype control mice prior to and post therapy with parenteral iron were evaluated with Advia. Intraperitoneal iron dextran injection at 10mg/25gm body weight daily 5 days per week for 12 days was performed and then switched to 1.25mg/25gm body weight of iron injection for another 10 days for a total of 4 weeks. Histological samples of liver and heart were stained with Prussian blue in mice prior to and post administration of parenteral iron. Immunohistochemistry with antibody to F4/80, specific for macrophages, was performed and counterstained with Prussian blue in livers and hearts of THL and C57 mice. The RBC indices in THL mice reveal an anemia (HCT 29.5±2.3 vs 45±2.1%, P=0.005) and reticulocytosis (2218±501 vs 406±101 x 109 cells, P=0.018) prior to therapy relative to the C57 mice (values presented as mean ± standard deviation). In THL mice after parenteral iron, HCT (41.8±6.8 vs 29.5±2.3%, P=0.04) and reticulocyte counts (2218±501 vs 3760±633 x 109 cells, P=0.03) increased significantly from pre-treatment values while in C57 mice, the HCT (53.8±6 vs 45±2.1%, NS) and reticulocyte count (406±101 vs 210±49 x109 cells, NS) did not change appreciably from baseline. Prior to therapy, the liver of THL mice exhibit 20–25% Kupffer cells staining with Prussian blue, with no Prussian blue staining in hepatocytes. The hearts of THL mice have no macrophages and no iron deposition at baseline. Prior to therapy, the livers of C57 mice had similar numbers of Kupffer cells compared to THL mice though none stain with Prussian blue. After treatment with parenteral iron, the livers of THL and C57 mice became significantly iron loaded (75–80% of Kupffer cells are positive for Prussian blue), the number of Kupffer cells increased 4-fold, and the majority of the Prussian blue staining was limited to Kupffer cells (90–95%). After treatment with parenteral iron, the hearts of THL and C57 mice became significantly iron loaded as well, but unlike the liver, most (90%) of the Prussian blue positive cells were myocytes. Only a small fraction of the myocytes in the heart was involved (5%). THL mice appear to be iron deficient and show bone marrow reserve with reticulocytosis significantly above baseline when excess iron is administered. Iron overload secondary to intraperitoneal iron dextran administration affects THL mice as well as C57 mice. In the liver of THL mice, Kupffer cells normally resident in the liver become laden with iron; little iron is deposited in hepatocytes. In the heart, an organ without resident macrophages and few macrophages migrating into the tissue during parenteral iron administration, both THL and C57 mice reveal myocyte deposition of iron. In conclusion, parenteral iron administration leads to a noticeable increase in RBCs in THL mice. Furthermore, both the livers and hearts of THL mice accumulate iron. Finally, these findings correlate well with the natural history of cardiac iron overload in human β-thalassemia major, leading to the conclusion that THL mice are a suitable model for the study of cardiac iron overload in thalassemia.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. SCI-25-SCI-25
Author(s):  
Jodie L. Babitt

Abstract Abstract SCI-25 Systemic iron balance is regulated by the key iron regulatory hormone hepcidin. Secreted by the liver, hepcidin inhibits iron absorption from the diet and iron mobilization from body stores by decreasing cell surface expression of the iron export protein ferroportin. Iron administration increases hepcidin expression, thereby providing a feedback mechanism to limit further iron absorption, while anemia and hypoxia inhibit hepcidin expression, thereby increasing iron availability for erythropoiesis. Hepcidin excess is thought to have a role in the anemia of inflammation, while hepcidin deficiency is thought to be the common pathogenic mechanism underlying the iron overload disorder hereditary hemochromatosis, due to mutations in the genes encoding hepcidin itself (HAMP), HFE, transferrin receptor 2 (TFR2), or hemojuvelin (HFE2). Notably the precise molecular mechanisms by which iron levels are “sensed” and how this iron “signal” is transduced to modulate hepcidin expression have remained elusive. We have recently discovered that hemojuvelin is a co-receptor for the bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling pathway, and that hemojuvelin-mediated BMP signals increase hepcidin expression at the transcriptional level. In addition to patients with HFE2 mutations and Hfe2 knockout mice, other genetic mouse models associated with impaired hepatic BMP signaling through a global knockout of the ligand Bmp6, or selective hepatic knockout of an intracellular mediator of BMP signaling, Smad4, also cause inappropriately low hepcidin expression and iron overload. Exogenous BMP6 administration in mice increases hepatic hepcidin expression and reduces serum iron, while BMP6 antagonists inhibit hepatic hepcidin expression, mobilize reticuloendothelial cell iron stores and increase serum iron. Not only does the BMP6-hemojuvelin-SMAD pathway regulate hepcidin expression and thereby systemic iron homeostasis, but also the BMP6-SMAD pathway itself is regulated by iron. Acute iron administration in mice increases phosphorylation of Smad proteins in the liver, and chronic changes in dietary iron modulate hepatic Bmp6 mRNA expression and phosphorylation of Smad proteins concordantly with Hamp mRNA expression. Together, these data support the paramount role of the BMP6-hemojuvelin-SMAD signaling pathway in the iron-mediated regulation of hepcidin expression and systemic iron homeostasis, and suggest that modulators of this pathway may be an alternative therapeutic strategy for treating disorders of iron homeostasis. Recent work elucidating the role of the BMP signaling pathway in hepcidin regulation and systemic iron homeostasis will be presented. Disclosures Babitt: Ferrumax Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. SCI-21-SCI-21
Author(s):  
Samira Lakhal-Littleton

Abstract Ferroportin, the only known mammalian iron export protein, releases iron from the duodenum, reticuloendothelial system and liver, the sites of iron absorption, recycling and storage respectively. By downregulating ferroportin, the liver-derived hormone hepcidin controls systemic iron availability in response to erythroid demand and inflammation. This ferroportin/hepcidin axis has long been recognized as essential for systemic iron homeostasis. However, both ferroportin and hepcidin are found in tissues not recognized for their role in systemic iron control, such as the heart, the kidney, the brain and the placenta. Co-existence within the same tissue suggests a possible function for hepcidin and ferroportin in local iron homeostasis. However, this hypothesis has not been formally explored. Using mouse models with cardiac-specific manipulation of hepcidin and ferroportin, we have uncovered a role for the cardiac hepcidin/ferroportin axis in cell-autonomous iron homeostasis within cardiomyocytes. Disruption of this cardiac pathway leads to fatal cardiac dysfunction, even against a background of normal systemic iron homeostasis. One the one hand, loss of cardiac ferroportin causes by fatal cardiac iron overload that is preventable by dietary iron restriction 1. On the other hand, loss of cardiac hepcidin or of cardiac hepcidin responsiveness causes fatal cardiomyocyte iron deficiency that is preventable by intravenous iron administration. Comparative study of cardiac iron homeostasis and function in cardiac versus systemic models of ferroportin/hepcidin disruption provides insight into the interplay between systemic and cellular iron homeostasis. A role for the hepcidin/ferroportin axis in cell-autonomous iron control, demonstrated here in the context of the heart, has not previously been described in any other tissue. A pertinent question is whether our findings in the heart extend to other tissues that express both hepcidin and ferroportin, such as the kidney, brain and placenta. Disturbances in iron homeostasis are of clinical importance in cardiovascular disease, renal failure, neurodegeneration and developmental defects. Our findings have two clinically relevant implications: a) that disruption of the local hepcidin/ferroportin axis may in itself have a disease-modifying effect, and b) that therapeutic strategies developed to target the systemic hepcidin/ferroportin axis may have off-target effects relating to local iron control within some tissues. Reference 1.Lakhal-Littleton S, Wolna M, Carr C, et al. Cardiac ferroportin regulates cellular iron homeostasis and is important for cardiac function. PNAS. 2015; 10;112(10):3164-3169. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Verena Petzer ◽  
Igor Theurl ◽  
Günter Weiss

Inflammation, being a hallmark of many chronic diseases, including cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and chronic kidney disease, negatively affects iron homeostasis, leading to iron retention in macrophages of the mononuclear phagocyte system. Functional iron deficiency is the consequence, leading to anemia of inflammation (AI). Iron deficiency, regardless of anemia, has a detrimental impact on quality of life so that treatment is warranted. Therapeutic strategies include (1) resolution of the underlying disease, (2) iron supplementation, and (3) iron redistribution strategies. Deeper insights into the pathophysiology of AI has led to the development of new therapeutics targeting inflammatory cytokines and the introduction of new iron formulations. Moreover, the discovery that the hormone, hepcidin, plays a key regulatory role in AI has stimulated the development of several therapeutic approaches targeting the function of this peptide. Hence, inflammation-driven hepcidin elevation causes iron retention in cells and tissues. Besides pathophysiological concepts and diagnostic approaches for AI, this review discusses current guidelines for iron replacement therapies with special emphasis on benefits, limitations, and unresolved questions concerning oral versus parenteral iron supplementation in chronic inflammatory diseases. Furthermore, the review explores how therapies aiming at curing the disease underlying AI can also affect anemia and discusses emerging hepcidin antagonizing drugs, which are currently under preclinical or clinical investigation.


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