scholarly journals Liver Iron Concentration Assessed by SQUID Biosusceptometry Compared to Heat-dried Liver Biopsy: A Blinded Study.

Author(s):  
Marcela Weyhmiller ◽  
Zahra Pakbaz ◽  
John Butz ◽  
Ellen Fung ◽  
Douglas Paulson ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective Biomagnetic liver susceptometry (BLS) is a noninvasive method to quantify liver iron concentration (LIC). Here we report our findings from a prospective study which validates in vivo LIC from a SQUID biosusceptometer by in vitro LIC in fresh tissue and paraffin-embedded biopsies from patients at risk for iron overload.Materials and Methods LIC was measured by BLS and biopsy. LIC by biopsy were measured in 40 dry weight fresh tissue and paraffin-embedded liver biopsy samples. LIC from biopsies and total iron scores from histology were compared to biosusceptometry. In addition, the wet-to-dry weight ratio was determined.Results Liver iron concentrations measured by BLS and in 40 fresh tissue biopsies were related by a factor of 6.0 ± 0.2 (r2 = 0.88). Similar results were obtained from comparisons with deparaffinized biopsies (6.6±0.3, r2=0.87) and histology (6.7±1.3, r2=0.47). In contrast, a mean wet-to-dry weight ratio of 4.1 ± 0.7 was achieved from biopsies immediately weighed after the biopsy procedure.ConclusionLIC derived from two independent measures, the historical biopsy gold standard and biosusceptometry, were highly correlated. When comparing biosusceptometry with wet weight biopsies, the liver tissue sample size is critical.

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 2675-2675
Author(s):  
Zahra Pakbaz ◽  
Roland Fischer ◽  
Elliott Vichinsky ◽  
Robert L. Fagaly ◽  
Douglas Paulson ◽  
...  

Abstract The “Optimal Liver Iron” range in iron overloaded patients with thalassemia has been established by Olivieri and Brittenham (Blood, 1997) as 1–2.2 mg/g wet weight liver using direct measurement or calculated as 3.2 to 7 mg/g dry liver weight based on a 3.33 correction factor for body water. This report describes the relationship between liver iron concentration (LIC) measured by SQUID biosusceptometry (BLS, wet weight) compared to liver biopsy (dry weight), in patients with thalassemia (THAL) or sickle cell disease (SCD). A total of 38 chronically transfused patients (THAL n=19, SCD n=19) were prospectively assessed for LIC measured by BLS and liver biopsy within 2 month of each other. Most BLS results were submitted to data repository before receiving iron concentration from liver biopsy. LIC was measured by a low temperature SQUID biosusceptometer system (Ferritometer®) under the standardized Hamburg-Torino-Oakland protocol. Iron in fresh tissue and paraffin embedded liver biopsy samples was measured at Mayo clinics by Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer (ICP-MS). Subjects ranged in age from 5 to 40 years (median: 18 y). Median LIC (n=38) measured by SQUID was 1777 (365–4883) [mg/g wet weight], median LIC by biopsy (fresh tissue) was 10861(1854–32864) [mg/g dry weight]. After excluding the subjects with BMI>30 kg/m2 (n=5), the Spearman rank correlation between wet weight LIC assessed by BLS and dry weight LIC from fresh tissue sample measured by ICP-MS was highly significant (RS=0.90, p<0.0001). No significant difference between fresh tissue and paraffin embedded LIC values was observed. The agreement between BLS and fresh tissue biopsy was tested by Bland-Altman plots. After normalization, no significant proportional or zero bias was visible. The 95% limits of agreement between SQUID-BLS and biopsy LIC values were found between −56% (or –6733 μg/g) and 48% (or 7027 μg/g). This kind of agreement is similar to the results achieved with MRI-R2 by St. Pierre et al (Blood, 2005)(–56% and 50%), however, BLS is a totally independent method relying only on the specific magnetic susceptibility of the hemosiderin-ferritin iron complex. The conversion factor between the two methods (LIC by fresh tissue biopsy vs. LIC by BLS) obtained from a weighted linear regression with zero intercept (Marquardt algorithm) was 6.1 ± 0.3 (R2 = 0.86–0.88, cn2 = 2.3–2.6). Using this conversion factor, the recommended “optimal range” for liver iron in patients with thalassemia major should be considered as 6–13.2 mg/g dry weight liver rather than the generally accepted 3.2–7 mg/g dry weight liver.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 3826-3826
Author(s):  
Zahra Pakbaz ◽  
Roland Fischer ◽  
John Butz ◽  
Drucilla Foote ◽  
Ekua Hackney-Stephens ◽  
...  

Abstract Liver biopsy, which is the gold standard for liver iron assessment in patients with hemosiderosis, is painful, associated with risk of infection or bleeding, and may be affected by uneven iron distribution and variation in analytical methods. Monitoring iron overload by serum ferritin is still a routine practice although its limitations are well known. Therefore, using non-invasive liver iron assessment by quantitative MRI or by liver susceptometry with a SQUID biomagnetometer (BLS) would be the better alternatives. This report explores the accuracy of liver iron concentration (LIC) measured by BLS at CHRCO compared to liver biopsy, in patients with thalassemia and sickle cell disease. A total of 33 patients with chronically transfused thalassemia (n=16) or sickle cell disease (n= 17) were prospectively assessed for LIC measured by BLS and liver biopsy within 2 month of each other. LIC was measured by a low temperature SQUID biosusceptometer system (Ferritometer®) under the standardized Hamburg-Torino-Oakland protocol. Iron in fresh tissue liver biopsy samples (with a dry weight larger than 1 mg) was measured at Mayo clinics by Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer (ICP-MS). Median value for the wet to dry weight of the tissue samples was 3.8 (3.1–6.2). Subjects ranged in age from 7 to 40 years (median: 18 y). Median LIC (wet weight) measured by SQUID was 1915 (415–4826) [mg/g wet weight ], median LIC by biopsy (dry weight) was 12681(1854–32864) [mg/g dry weight]. Serum ferritin ranged from 405 to 9843 (median: 1831). The Spearman rank correlation between wet weight LIC assessed by BLS and dry weight LIC from fresh tissue sample measured by ICP-MS was highly significant (RS=0.93, p<0.0001). The conversion factor between the two methods obtained from a weighted linear regression with zero intercept was 6.1 ± 0.3 (R2 = 0.92, cn2 = 0.5), while the median value for wet-to-dry weight ratio of the actual samples is 3.8. This conversion factor agrees with the value reported earlier by Piga et al (Blood2005; 106(11): 755a). The role of the wet-to-dry weight ratio needs to be explored further as the conversion factor generated from the linear regression is significantly larger. Fig1. LInear regression LIC (BLS)=(0.165 ± 0.008) *LIC (biopsy) weighted by the uncertainties to the two methods (R2 = 0.92, reduced chi-square χ2= 0.5). Fig1. LInear regression LIC (BLS)=(0.165 ± 0.008) *LIC (biopsy) weighted by the uncertainties to the two methods (R2 = 0.92, reduced chi-square χ2= 0.5).


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 3726-3726
Author(s):  
Peter Nielsen ◽  
Tim H. Bruemmendorf ◽  
Regine Grosse ◽  
Rainer Engelhardt ◽  
Nicolaus Kroeger ◽  
...  

Abstract Patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), osteomyelofibrosis (OMF), or severe aplastic anemia (SAA) suffer from ineffective erythropoiesis due to pancytopenia, which is treated with red blood cell transfusion leading to iron overload. Especially in low-risk patients with mean survival times of > 5 years, potentially toxic levels of liver iron concentration (LIC) can be reached. We hypothesize that the higher morbidity seen in transfused patients may be influenced by iron toxicity. Following a meeting in Nagasaki 2005, a consensus statement on iron overload in myelodysplastic syndromes has been published, however, there is still no common agreement about the initiation of chelation treatment in MDS patients. In the present study, a total of 67 transfused patients with MDS (n = 20, age: 17 – 75 y), OMF (n = 4, age: 48 – 68 y), SAA (n = 43, age: 5 – 64 y) were measured by SQUID biomagnetic liver susceptometry (BLS) and their liver and spleen volumes were scanned by ultrasound at the Hamburg biosusceptometer. Less than 50 % were treated with DFO. LIC (μg/g-liver wet weight, conversion factor of about 6 for μg/g-dry weight) and volume data were retrospectively analyzed in comparison to ferritin values. Additionally, 15 patients (age: 8 – 55 y) between 1 and 78 months after hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) were measured and analyzed. LIC values ranged from 149 to 8404 with a median value of 2705 μg/g-liver, while serum ferritin (SF) concentrations were between 500 and 10396 μg/l with a median ratio of SF/LIC = 0.9 [(μg/l)/(μg/g-liver)] (range: 0.4 to 5.2). The Spearman rank correlation between SF and LIC was found to be highly significant (RS = 0.80, p < 0.0001), however, prediction by the linear regression LIC = (0.83± 0.08)·SF was poor (R2 = 0.5) as found also in other iron overload diseases. Although iron toxicity is a long-term risk factor, progression of hepatic fibrosis has been observed for LIC > 16 mg/g dry weight or 2667 μg/g-liver (Angelucci et al. Blood2002; 100:17–21) within 60 months and significant cardiac iron levels have been observed for LIC > 350 μmol/g or 3258 μg/g-liver (Jensen et al. Blood2003; 101:4632-9). The Angelucci threshold of hepatic fibrosis progression was exceeded by 51 % of our patients, while 39 % were exceeding the Jensen threshold of potential risk of cardiac iron toxicity. The total body iron burden is even higher as more than 50 % of the patients had hepatomegaly (median liver enlargement factor 1.2 of normal). A liver iron concentration of about 3000 μg/g-liver or 18 mg/g-dry weight has to be seen as latest intervention threshold for chelation treatment as MDS patients are affected by more than one risk factor. A more secure intervention threshold would be a LIC of 1000 μg/g-liver or 4 – 6 mg/g-dry weight, corresponding with a ferritin level of 900 μg/l for transfused MDS patients. Such a LIC value is not exceeded by most subjects with heterozygous HFE-associated hemochromatosis and is well tolerated without treatment during life-time. Non-invasive liver iron quantification offers a more reliable information on the individual range of iron loading in MDS which is also important for a more rational indication for a chelation treatment in a given patient.


2015 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
pp. 233-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yutaka Kohgo ◽  
Akio Urabe ◽  
Yurdanur Kilinç ◽  
Leyla Agaoglu ◽  
Krzysztof Warzocha ◽  
...  

Iron overload in transfusion-dependent patients with rare anemias can be managed with chelation therapy. This study evaluated deferasirox efficacy and safety in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), aplastic anemia (AA) or other rare anemias. A 1-year, open-label, multicenter, single-arm, phase II trial was performed with deferasirox (10-40 mg/kg/day, based on transfusion frequency and therapeutic goals), including an optional 1-year extension. The primary end point was a change in liver iron concentration (LIC) after 1 year. Secondary end points included changes in efficacy and safety parameters (including ophthalmologic assessments) overall as well as in a Japanese subpopulation. Overall, 102 patients (42 with MDS, 29 with AA and 31 with other rare anemias) were enrolled; 57 continued into the extension. Mean absolute change in LIC was -10.9 mg Fe/g dry weight (d.w.) after 1 year (baseline: 24.5 mg Fe/g d.w.) and -13.5 mg Fe/g d.w. after 2 years. The most common drug-related adverse event was increased serum creatinine (23.5%), predominantly in MDS patients. Four patients had suspected drug-related ophthalmologic abnormalities. Outcomes in Japanese patients were generally consistent with the overall population. Results confirm deferasirox efficacy in patients with rare anemias, including a Japanese subpopulation. The safety profile was consistent with previous studies and ophthalmologic parameters generally agreed with baseline values (EUDRACT 2006-003337-32).


Author(s):  
Vipul V. Chemburkar ◽  
Archit A. Gupta ◽  
Devdas S. Shetty ◽  
Ruchi R. Agarwal

Background: Liver iron overload is considered to be the histological hallmark of genetic hemochromatosis. The accurate estimation of iron overload is important to establish the diagnosis of hemochromatosis. The aim of the present study was to estimate T2* liver value, quantify liver iron concentration (in milligram of iron per gram dry weight) and find out the appropriate therapy for patients with iron overload according to severity index.Methods: A cross-sectional observational study was carried out in Department of Radio Diagnosis, at B.Y.L. Nair Hospital and medical college, Mumbai from June 2017 to August 2018. A total of 50 cases were enrolled for the present study.Results: Male predominance (66.0%) was seen. Mean duration of disease among the studied cases was 10.52±6.06 years, with minimum and maximum duration of disease of 1 and 26 years respectively. Eight percent had compliance to visit and treatment among the enrolled cases.Conclusions: MRI was concluded to be potentially useful non-invasive method for evaluating liver iron stones in a wide spectrum of haematological and liver diseases.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2004-2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maciej W Garbowski ◽  
John-Paul Carpenter ◽  
Gillian Smith ◽  
Dudley J Pennell ◽  
John B Porter

Abstract Abstract 2004 Poster Board I-1026 Background and rationale Non-invasive estimation of tissue iron concentration is being used increasingly to follow responses to chelation therapy. Magnetic resonance (MR) T2* was originally developed to estimate myocardial iron but the first description of the myocardial T2* method also demonstrated a clear relationship between liver T2* and liver iron concentration (LIC) measured by biopsy (Anderson, Eur Heart J 2001). The inclusion of liver analysis at this time was intended mainly to show the relationship of T2* to tissue iron rather than as a standard method for LIC measurement, particularly as the echo times used were too long to measure the high iron levels commonly found in the liver. Since this work, other MR methods such as the R2 technique (St. Pierre, Blood 2004) have been specifically validated to measure LIC. However, if T2* could be validated and calibrated appropriately for LIC, it may be convenient to measure liver and heart iron at the same time using this rapid technique. Since the initial calibration of the T2* method, there have been major improvements in scanner technology and hardware. In the original paper, eight different echo times were acquired (TE 2.2- 20.1ms), each of which required a separate breath-hold with important implications for image registration regarding the measurement of T2*. Much shorter, more closely spaced echo times are now possible in a single breath-hold which makes the calculation of T2* more accurate, especially at higher liver iron concentrations where T2* is short. Methods: A large cohort of patients at UCLH have had liver biopsies as part of iron chelation studies on Deferasirox, while continuing to be monitored by T2* of both heart and liver. Data pairs for LIC calibration curve plots were chosen as nested values by shortest biopsy-to-MR time lapse criterion (±75 days) from all biopsy and hepatic T2* results. Liver biopsy iron was measured in a single central laboratory in Rennes, France (Clinique des Maladies du Foie [Clinic for Hepatic Illnesses], Center Hospitalier Universitaire) on paraffin embedded sections as previously described (Soriano-Cubells MJ, Atomic Spectrosc. 1984). All MR scans were performed on a 1.5T Sonata MR scanner (Siemens, Germany) using a 4-channel anterior phased array coil at Royal Brompton Hospital, London. A transverse slice through the centre of the liver was imaged using a multi-echo single breath-hold gradient echo T2* sequence with a range of echo times (TE 0.93-16.0ms). T2* decay was measured using Thalassaemia tools (Cardiovascular Imaging Solutions, London, UK) from a region of interest (ROI) in an area of homogeneous liver tissue, avoiding blood vessels and other sources of artefact. To account for background noise, a truncation method was used for curve-fitting (He, Magn Reson Med 2008). All T2* measurements were performed in triplicate by 2 independent observers choosing three separate ROIs to analyse. The ROIs were chosen to be as large as possible in three separate areas of the liver (anterior, mid/lateral and posterior). Spearman correlation method was used to estimate the degree of relationship between biopsy LIC and hepatic R2* (1/T2*) values, both of which showed positive skew. Results and conclusions: 61 patients had both liver biopsy and liver MR measurements undertaken. However, only 18 had biopsies within 75 days of MR T2* measurement and these are the patients included in the following analysis. There is a linear relationship between biopsy LIC and the reciprocal of T2* (R2*), given by: LIC = 0.03 x R2* + 0.74 (R2=0.96 p<0.0001, slope 95% CI 0.027-0.033, with y intercept CI -0.73 to 2.2). The 95% confidence intervals for the linear regression line were calculated from the SEM and are shown as the broken lines (Figure 1). Staging of fibrosis/cirrhosis provided in biopsy reports was not found to significantly affect regression analysis contrary to previous studies. The inset shows the relationship between T2* and biopsy LIC. The new calibration shows acceptable linearity and reproducibility over an LIC range up to 30mg/g dry weight and gives LIC values approximately 1.94 times higher than the original method reported by Anderson. Comparison of these values with those obtained by SQUID and Ferriscan would also be of interest. Disclosures: Pennell: Cardiovascular Imaging SOlutions, London, UK: Director.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 4053-4053
Author(s):  
John C Wood ◽  
Ashley Mo ◽  
Aakanksha Gera ◽  
Montre Koh ◽  
Thomas Coates ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4053 Poster Board III-988 Introduction Hemoglobinopathies are among the most common genetic diseases in the work. Many hemoglobinopathy patients require lifeline transfusion, iron chelation, and careful monitoring of iron stores. Liver iron concentration (LIC) is an excellent metric of transfusional iron balance and total body iron stores(1). Noninvasive LIC estimation by MRI is gradually replacing liver biopsy but remains limited by cost and availability, particularly in regions where thalassemia is prevalent(2). Quantitative computed tomography (QCT) was proposed as a means to estimate LIC 30 years ago, but there has been surprisingly limited validation(3-5). QCT is cheaper and more available than MRI. Steady improvements in CT instrumentation and standardization warrant a re-evaluation of QCT for iron quantitation. In this study, we determined liver attenuation as a function of MRI-predicted liver iron concentration in 45 patients over a 6 year period. Methods This study represents a convenience sample of all iron-overloaded patients who had undergone both QCT for bone density and LIC measurement by MRI at Children's Hospital Los Angeles. 64 usable observations were obtained in 45 patients; 14 patients had multiple exams(range 2-6). MRI and QCT examinations were considered “paired” if the scans were less than 120 days apart (59 studies). MRI liver R2 and R2* examinations were performed and analyzed as previously described(2). Quantitative CT was performed on a General Electric Hilite Advantage. A single axial 10 mm thick slice was collected at the L1 level using a KVp of 80 at 70 mA for 1 second. Three hydroxyappetite phantoms, calibrated to 0, 125, and 250 Hounsfield units, were placed in scanning platform (CT-T bone densitometry package; GE Medical Systems), approximately 7 cm from mid-vertebral body. Calibration curve was obtained from regions of interest drawn within the three phantoms, using linear regression calculated by custom MATLAB routines. Regions of interest in the liver were drawn in ∼ 9 cm2 regions of the right and left lobe of the liver, as well as a region encompassing the entire cross-sectional area of the liver. Results Most patients had thalassemia major and moderate to severe iron overload, with a LIC of 14.1 ± 14 mg/g dry weight and a cardiac R2* of 70.5 ± 95.0 Hz (median T2* of 30.9 ms). Patients who were receiving regular transfusions were well transfused, with a pre-transfusion hemoglobin of 9-9.5 g/dl. All chronically transfused patients were using deferoxamine until approximately 2005, with most switching to deferasirox in 1/2005. Figure 1 demonstrates MRI-predicted LIC as a function of liver attenuation. There is a strong linear relationship having a slope of 0.591 mg/g dry weight of liver per HU. Normal liver attenuation ranges in non iron overload children and young adults is 57-76 HU. Upper limit of normal corresponds to a predicted LIC of 6 m/g, indicating an intrinsic lack of sensitivity for qCT at low iron concentrations. Time-courses of CT-iron relationship from 14 patients whom had serial evaluations paralleled the regression line and were well constrained by the 95% confidence intervals, suggesting the calibration is suitable for serial analysis (not shown). Whole liver attenuation values were unbiased with respect to values from the right and left lobe; coefficient of variation was 2.2-4.9%. Conclusion The present work represents the largest human validation of QCT for liver iron quantitation. QCT techniques have inadequate sensitivity to discriminate LIC values less than 6 mg/g but are not limited by high iron concentrations. High reproducibility makes them suitable for tracking serial LIC changes. QCT may be an acceptable surrogate for LIC in hospitals lacking the software, personnel, or financial resources to support MRI or SQUID LIC measurements. Acknowledgments: This work supported by NIH HL075592, CDC (U27/CCU922106) and GCRC (NIH #RR00043-43). Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 2063-2063
Author(s):  
Pedro Ramos ◽  
Sara Gardenghi ◽  
Robert W Grady ◽  
Maria de Sousa ◽  
Stefano Rivella

Abstract Abstract 2063 ß-Thalassemia is a genetic disorder characterized by decreased or absent production of ß-globin chains, leading to ineffective erythropoiesis, anemia and iron overload. Hepcidin, the hormone that controls iron homeostasis, is regulated by several mechanisms, including erythropoiesis, iron overload, inflammation and hypoxia. In the absence of transfusion therapy, patients with ß-thalassemia major exhibit a severe ineffective erythropoiesis that suppresses hepcidin expression. However, in patients or animal affected by ß-thalassemia intermedia (th3/+), iron overload is associated with a milder form of ineffective erythropoiesis. In this study we investigated whether th3/+ mice retain the ability to modulate hepcidin expression in response to iron load, despite their increased erythropoietic activity. We analyzed some of the genes involved in the regulation of hepcidin, in particular, genes that are upregulated by iron overload in wt mice. These included Bmp6, a strong modulator of Hamp in response to iron, and Id1, Atoh8 and Smad7, other targets of the Bmp/Smad pathway. Analysis of the phosphorylation of the Smad protein complex is in progress. In addition, we generated mice affected by ß-thalassemia intermedia lacking the Hfe gene (Hfe-th3/+), in an attempt to determine whether or not this gene is involved in hepcidin regulation in this disorder. We analyzed th3/+ mice at 2, 5 and 12 months of age. In 2-month-old th3/+ mice hepcidin expression was significantly low compared to wt mice. As th3/+ mice age and their iron overload worsens, hepcidin expression increases showing similar and elevated levels in th3/+ compared to wt animals, respectively at 5 and 12 months. At 2 months, hepcidin expression normalized to liver iron concentration exhibited even lower levels in th3/+ mice compared to wt animals. This ratio did not change in aging th3/+ animals, despite the fact that their liver iron concentration increased over time (0.66, 1.24, and 1.45 ug/mg of dry weight at 2, 5 and 12 months, respectively). The expression levels of Bmp6, Id1, Atoh8 and Smad7 followed a similar pattern, being generally downregulated at 2 months compared to wt mice. However, as iron overload progressed, th3/+ mice exhibited increased expression of these genes compared to wt mice. Similar to what was observed with hepcidin, their expression was low in th3/+ mice at all ages when normalized to liver iron concentration. These observations indicate that hepcidin expression in ß-thalassemia increases over time and is regulated by the relative levels of ineffective erythropoiesis and iron overload. We also investigated the relationship between Hfe and hepcidin in response to iron in ß-thalassemia. We transplanted the ß-thalassemic phenotype into lethally irradiated wt or Hfe-KO mice, generating th3/+ and Hfe-th3/+ animals, respectively. Compared to th3/+ mice, we observed that Hfe-th3/+ animals had increased hepatic iron (3.09 vs 1.29 ug/mg of dry weight, p≤0.05) and serum iron (232 vs 162 ug/dL, p≤0.05), with no significant changes in splenic iron concentration. The Hfe-th3/+ mice also exhibited increased hemoglobin levels (9.4 vs 7.8 g/dL, p≤0.001) due to an increase in both red cell counts (8.9 vs 8.0 ×106 cells/uL, p≤0.01) and mean corpuscular hemoglobin levels (10.6 vs 9.7 pg, **p≤0.05). However, this did not reduce splenomegaly or ineffective erythropoiesis. We also analyzed the levels of hepcidin, Bmp6, Id1, Smad7 and Atoh8 in 5-month-old mice. At his time point expression of most of these genes was similar between wt, th3/+ and Hfe-th3/+ mice. Only expression of Bmp6 was elevated in the two thalassemic groups compared to wt mice. When the levels of hepcidin, Bmp6, Id1, Smad7 and Atoh8 expression were normalized to liver iron content, we observed significant reductions in Hfe-th3/+ mice compared to th3/+ animals. Taken together, these observations indicate that iron overload can partially counteract the repressive effect of ineffective erythropoiesis on hepcidin expression in th3/+ mice. Moreover, lack of Hfe further impairs the ability of hepcidin and other iron regulated genes to respond to iron overload, aggravating this feature in thalassemic mice. Overall, this indicates that Hfe plays a positive role in the regulation of hepcidin in ß-thalassemia. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Diagnostics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 768
Author(s):  
Riad Abou Zahr ◽  
Barbara E. U. Burkhardt ◽  
Lubaina Ehsan ◽  
Amanda Potersnak ◽  
Gerald Greil ◽  
...  

Background: Non-invasive determination of liver iron concentration (LIC) is a valuable tool that guides iron chelation therapy in transfusion-dependent patients. Multiple methods have been utilized to measure LIC by MRI. The purpose of this study was to compare free breathing R2* (1/T2*) to whole-liver Ferriscan R2 method for estimation of LIC in a pediatric and young adult population who predominantly have hemoglobinopathies. Methods: Clinical liver and cardiac MRI scans from April 2016 to May 2018 on a Phillips 1.5 T scanner were reviewed. Free breathing T2 and T2* weighted images were acquired on each patient. For T2, multi-slice spin echo sequences were obtained. For T2*, a single mid-liver slice fast gradient echo was performed starting at 0.6 ms with 1.2 ms increments with signal averaging. R2 measurements were performed by Ferriscan analysis. R2* measurements were performed by quantitative T2* map analysis. Results: 107 patients underwent liver scans with the following diagnoses: 76 sickle cell anemia, 20 Thalassemia, 9 malignancies and 2 Blackfan Diamond anemia. Mean age was 12.5 ± 4.5 years. Average scan time for R2 sequences was 10 min, while R2* sequence time was 20 s. R2* estimation of LIC correlated closely with R2 with a correlation coefficient of 0.94. Agreement was strongest for LIC < 15 mg Fe/g dry weight. Overall bias from Bland–Altman plot was 0.66 with a standard deviation of 2.8 and 95% limits of agreement −4.8 to 6.1. Conclusion: LIC estimation by R2* correlates well with R2-Ferriscan in the pediatric age group. Due to the very short scan time of R2*, it allows imaging without sedation or anesthesia. Cardiac involvement was uncommon in this cohort.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (5) ◽  
pp. 1775-1776 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roland Fischer ◽  
Paul Harmatz ◽  
Peter Nielsen

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