Serum ferritin concentration predicts hepatic fibrosis better than hepatic iron concentration in humanHFE-Haemochromatosis

2017 ◽  
Vol 37 (9) ◽  
pp. 1382-1388 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marnie J. Wood ◽  
Darrell H. G. Crawford ◽  
Leesa F. Wockner ◽  
Lawrie W. Powell ◽  
Grant A. Ramm
Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 79 (10) ◽  
pp. 2741-2748 ◽  
Author(s):  
NF Olivieri ◽  
G Koren ◽  
D Matsui ◽  
PP Liu ◽  
L Blendis ◽  
...  

Abstract In patients with thalassemia intermedia in whom hyperabsorption of iron may result in serious organ dysfunction, an orally effective iron- chelating drug would have major therapeutic advantages, especially for the many patients with thalassemia intermedia in the Third World. We report reduction in tissue iron stores and normalization of serum ferritin concentration after 9-month therapy with the oral chelator 1,2- dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (L1) in a 29-year-old man with thalassemia intermedia and clinically significant iron overload (SF 2,174 micrograms/L, transferrin saturation 100%; elevated AST and ALT, abnormal cardiac radionuclide angiogram) who was enrolled in the study with L1 75 mg/kg/day after he refused deferoxamine therapy. L1-Induced 24-hour urinary iron excretion during the first 6 months of therapy was (mean +/- SD, range) 53 +/- 30 (11 to 109) mg (0.77 mg/kg), declining during the last 3 months of L1 to 24 +/- 14 (13–40) mg (0.36 mg/kg), as serum ferritin decreased steadily to normal range (present value, 251 micrograms/L). Dramatic improvement in signal intensity of the liver and mild improvement in that of the heart was shown by comparison of T1- weighted spin echo magnetic resonance imaging with images obtained immediately before L1 administration was observed after 9 months of L1 therapy. Hepatic iron concentration decreased from 14.6 mg/g dry weight of liver before L1 therapy to 1.9 mg/g liver after 9 months of therapy. This constitutes the first report of normalization of serum ferritin concentration in parallel with demonstrated reduction in tissue iron stores as a result of treatment with L1. Use of L1 as a therapeutic option in patients with thalassemia intermedia and iron overload appears warranted.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 179-179
Author(s):  
Christine E. McLaren ◽  
Mary J. Emond ◽  
Pradyumna D. Phatak ◽  
Paul C. Adams ◽  
V. Nathan Subramaniam ◽  
...  

Abstract Variability in the severity of iron overload among homozygotes for the HFE C282Y polymorphism is one of the major problems extant in our understanding of hereditary hemochromatosis (HH). We conducted exome sequencing of DNA from C282Y homozygotes with markedly increased iron stores (cases) and C282Y homozygotes with normal or mildly increased iron stores (controls) to identify rare and common causal variants associated with variability of disease expression in HH. Criteria for cases included serum ferritin >1000 µg/L at diagnosis, and (a) mobilized body iron >10 g by quantitative phlebotomy, and/or (b) hepatic iron concentration >236 µmol/g dry weight. Criteria for controls included (a) serum ferritin <300 µg/L, or (b) age ≥50 y with ≤3.0 g iron removed by phlebotomy or age ≥40 y with ≤2.5 g iron removed by phlebotomy to achieve serum ferritin <50 µg/L. Deep sequencing of the full exome was performed in 33 cases and 14 controls. After quality control filtering, the dataset included 82,068 SNPs and 1,403 insertions/deletions (indels). Our initial analysis tested for differences in the distribution of variants between groups for each gene separately using the Sequence Kernel Association Test (SKAT) that includes rare and common variants but downweights the contribution of common variants to the test statistic. Only non-synonymous variants were included in the by-gene tests. Principal components were constructed from the exome variants to adjust for possible confounding by ancestry and to confirm no ancestral outliers. All study participants were male, and all clustered closely together within a larger group of Europeans in a principal components analysis of ancestry. Mean (SD) ages at presentation were 54 (11.0) y and 56 (9.4) y for cases and controls, respectively. Median serum ferritin was 2788 µg/L in those with increased iron stores and 309 μg/L in those with normal or mildly increased iron stores. The median transferrin saturation (94%) was greater in cases than in the comparison group (70%). In a preliminary analysis, we found 9 genes associated with case-control status. To separate effects of alcohol use and/or alcohol addiction variants, an analysis was conducted to compare the 13 controls and 22 cases who reported never using alcohol or only very light use. The two most significant genes identified in this comparison were GNPAT (p=7.4x10-6) and CDHR2 (p=2.8x10-4). A quantile-quantile (QQ) plot is shown in the Figure, comparing the observed distribution of –(log10p-values) from 10,337 genes to the expected uniform distribution if there were no variants modifying severity of expression, and gives evidence of the effect of the GNPAT gene.Figure 1Figure 1. Inspection of the two variants contributing to the GNPAT by-gene p-value revealed one missense variant (rs11558492) for which 0/13 controls had a polymorphism, while 16/22 cases had at least one missense variant, and one case was homozygous for this missense variant. The latter case presented at the early age of 26 with a serum ferritin of 1762 µg/L, 4+ hepatocellular iron and hepatic iron concentration of 284.4 µmol/g dry weight. GNPAT (aka DHAPAT) mutations/deletions have been found in peroxisomal disease, a class of diseases in which increased hepatic iron is observed (Biochim Biophys Acta 1801:272-280, 2010). GNPAT rs11558492 is common among people of European descent but might interact with aberrant HFE to increase risk of hepatic iron overload. Three rare variants in CDHR2 accounted for its low p-value, having a cumulative frequency of 4/13 among controls and 0/22 among cases: rs115050587, rs752138, rs143224505 with minor allele frequencies, MAF = 1.4%, 4.7% and 0.06%, respectively. The first two polymorphisms are predicted to be highly damaging by PolyPhen2 and the third probably damaging. Expression levels of CDHR2 recently have been associated with increased hepatocyte iron and elevated serum ferritin in liver allograft patients (J Clin Invest 122:368-382, 2012). These data indicate associations between iron status in HFE C282Y homozygotes and genes with previous links to iron overload that may modify severity of disease expression. Of note, the data suggest that more than one modifier gene may be involved in determining severity of disease in HFE C282Y homozygotes. Our results identify candidate genes for expanded studies that would examine their functional significance for iron absorption and metabolism. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3615-3615
Author(s):  
Pensri Pootrakul ◽  
Wanida Chua-anusorn ◽  
Adam Fleming ◽  
Paul Clark ◽  
Pornpan Sirankapracha ◽  
...  

Abstract Current non-invasive measurement techniques of hepatic iron concentration (HIC) include magnetic susceptometry (SQUID) and the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods utilising T2 and T2*. HIC can be quantified through image measurement of the proton transverse relaxation rate (R2) (St. Pierre et al Blood 2004). The potential for using the St Pierre method to monitor changes in HIC of patients with β-thalassemia/Hb E undergoing iron chelation therapy was investigated. Seventeen non-tansfusion dependant β-thal/Hb E patients who had not previously undergone chelation were studied. Subjects were chelated with the oral iron chelator Deferiprone (DFP) and had their HIC measured using both the R2-MRI and biopsy non-heme iron techniques pre and post treatment. Ferritin levels were also assayed for comparison. The subjects ages ranged from of 13 to 53 years (mean 31.6, SD 11.5). DFP was administered at a low dose of 50 mg/kg/Day with divided doses 2 –3 times daily. The periods of drug exposure ranged between 53 and 77 weeks (mean 64.1, SD 8.4). HIC by R2-MRI and tissue iron chemical analysis, and serum ferritin Measurement R2-HIC (mg/g DW) Biopsy-HIC (mg/g DW) Serum Ferritin (ng/ml) Mean ± SD Range Mean ± SD Range G.Mean ± SE Range Initial 17.8 ± 6.6 5.7 – 29.7 18.3 ± 9.0 6.0 – 40.1 2526 ± 432 842 – 6072 Final 8.4 ± 7.9 1.0 – 23.9 7.4 ± 7.3 0.2 – 25.5 416 ± 236 113 – 4030 The results show a significant decrease of HIC after long term administration of DFP with MRI and biopsy (p= .0004 and p<0.0001 respectively). Spearman rank correlations of R2-HIC with the liver non-heme Fe and serum ferritin measures gave positive values of 0.866 (p < 0.0001) and 0.768 (p < 0.0001) respectively. The mean reduction of R2-HIC, biopsy-HIC and serum ferritin were 53%, 69%, and 74%, respectively. A decrease of 20.5% (SD ±14.9%) in the standard deviation of the R2 distribution was observed suggesting a decrease in iron heterogeneity accompanied the mean HIC decrease. The results suggest that R2 MRI has the potential to be used as a clinical monitoring tool in chelation therapy.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 1330-1330
Author(s):  
Prashant Hiwarkar ◽  
Farah O'Boyle ◽  
Leena Karnik ◽  
Helen New ◽  
Richard Szydlo ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1330 Veno-occlusive disease (VOD) remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in children undergoing haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for thalassaemia. We investigated the impact of demographic characteristics, iron load (pre-transplant ferritin, hepatic iron concentration), hepatic fibrosis (Ishak staging), Pesaro risk class and defibrotide prophylaxis on the occurrence of VOD in 52 consecutive children (median age 6 years, range 2 – 18 years) undergoing myeloablative HLA-matched related donor HSCT for beta thalassaemia major (Pesaro class I n=27, class II n=23 and class III n=2). Following hypertransfusion to suppress endogenous haematopoiesis patients were conditioned with oral busulfan 14 mg/kg (days -9 to -6), cyclophosphamide 200 mg/kg (days -5 to -2) and alemtuzumab 0.3 mg/kg (days -8 to -6), except 2 Pesaro class III patients who received fludarabine instead of alemtuzumab. Graft versus host disease prophylaxis was ciclosporin for six months and methotrexate 10 mg/m2 on days +4 and +7. Forty patients had a liver biopsy prior to HSCT for Ishak staging of hepatic fibrosis. VOD was diagnosed in 18 (35%) according to Seattle criteria. The median onset of VOD was day +10 post-HSCT (range: 6 – 27 days); one patient developed late VOD on day +27. All patients had weight gain and hepatomegaly and the median peak bilirubin was 39 μmol/L (17 - 196). 13 patients (72%) had USS evidence of ascites and 3 (16%) patients had pleural effusion. Only 2 patients had reversal of portal blood flow on Doppler study. All patients who developed VOD were treated with defibrotide. Three (17%) patients required admission to intensive care for strict fluid balance and diuretic infusion and/or respiratory support without mortality. The incidence of VOD was highest in the pre-school children (10/22; 45%) compared to those aged 5–8 years (4/15; 27%) and > 8 years (4/15; 27%), although this difference was not statistically significant (p=0.13). No significant difference was noted in the gender (male=10/22; female=8/30, p=0.23) or ethnic origin (Middle-eastern=11/29; Asian=6/22, p=0.55). Pesaro risk class was associated with the occurrence of VOD: class I, 6/27 (22%); class II, 11/23 (47%), class III 1/2 (p=0.051). VOD occurred in 5/12 (41%), 7/20 (35%) and 2/7 (28%) of patients with hepatic iron <3 mg/g DW, 3–7 mg/g DW and >7 mg/g DW respectively (p=NS). The severity of hepatic fibrosis was significantly associated with the development of VOD: no fibrosis vs ≥ Ishak stage 3 fibrosis, p=0.024 (Fig. 1); stage 0 VOD 5/19 (26%); stage 1 VOD 2/9 (22%); stage 2 VOD 2/6 (33%); stage 3 VOD 3/5 (60%); and stage 4 VOD 1/1 (100%). To reduce the risk of VOD risk-adjusted defibrotide prophylaxis was introduced (hepatic iron concentration >4 mg/g dry weight and/or hepatic fibrosis ≥ stage 2). 5/19 (26%) developed VOD before introduction of defibrotide prophylaxis compared to 13/33 patients (39%) developed VOD after the introduction of defibrotide prophylaxis (p=0.34). Of the patients who developed VOD, 2/5 (40%) patients developed multiorgan failure requiring intensive care admission pre introduction of defibrotide prophylaxis whereas only 1/13 (8%) did subsequently. In summary, Pesaro risk class ≥2 and hepatic fibrosis ≥ stage 3 are significant risk factors for the occurrence of VOD. The degree of hepatic damage due to iron load is a predictor of VOD rather than hepatic iron concentration per se. Although introduction of defibrotide prophylaxis did not prevent VOD in this cohort, severe VOD only occurred in 1 patient, suggesting defibrotide prophylaxis may limit VOD in this high risk patient population. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 79 (10) ◽  
pp. 2741-2748 ◽  
Author(s):  
NF Olivieri ◽  
G Koren ◽  
D Matsui ◽  
PP Liu ◽  
L Blendis ◽  
...  

In patients with thalassemia intermedia in whom hyperabsorption of iron may result in serious organ dysfunction, an orally effective iron- chelating drug would have major therapeutic advantages, especially for the many patients with thalassemia intermedia in the Third World. We report reduction in tissue iron stores and normalization of serum ferritin concentration after 9-month therapy with the oral chelator 1,2- dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (L1) in a 29-year-old man with thalassemia intermedia and clinically significant iron overload (SF 2,174 micrograms/L, transferrin saturation 100%; elevated AST and ALT, abnormal cardiac radionuclide angiogram) who was enrolled in the study with L1 75 mg/kg/day after he refused deferoxamine therapy. L1-Induced 24-hour urinary iron excretion during the first 6 months of therapy was (mean +/- SD, range) 53 +/- 30 (11 to 109) mg (0.77 mg/kg), declining during the last 3 months of L1 to 24 +/- 14 (13–40) mg (0.36 mg/kg), as serum ferritin decreased steadily to normal range (present value, 251 micrograms/L). Dramatic improvement in signal intensity of the liver and mild improvement in that of the heart was shown by comparison of T1- weighted spin echo magnetic resonance imaging with images obtained immediately before L1 administration was observed after 9 months of L1 therapy. Hepatic iron concentration decreased from 14.6 mg/g dry weight of liver before L1 therapy to 1.9 mg/g liver after 9 months of therapy. This constitutes the first report of normalization of serum ferritin concentration in parallel with demonstrated reduction in tissue iron stores as a result of treatment with L1. Use of L1 as a therapeutic option in patients with thalassemia intermedia and iron overload appears warranted.


2019 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. e61-e62
Author(s):  
Justin Chin ◽  
Lawrie Powell ◽  
Louise Ramm ◽  
Elizabeth Mckinnon ◽  
Grant Ramm ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 156 (6) ◽  
pp. S-1251
Author(s):  
Barra P. Neary ◽  
Mohammad Tayyub ◽  
Asya Tacheva ◽  
Aidan Quinn ◽  
Greg Martin ◽  
...  

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