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Evaluation of Efficacy, Safety, and Satisfaction Taking Deferasirox Twice Daily Versus Once Daily in Patients With Transfusion-Dependent Thalassemia.
Karimi, M, Haghpanah, S, Bahoush, G, Ansari, S, Azarkeivan, A, Shahsavani, A, Bazrafshan, A, Jangjou, A
Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology. 2020;(1):23-26
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Deferasirox is a once-daily oral iron-chelation agent approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in November 2005. The authors aimed to evaluate efficacy, safety, and satisfaction of patients regarding twice-daily dose of deferasirox in patients with thalassemia who are resistant to once-daily regimen. METHODS In this historical cohort multicenter study, 34 patients with beta-thalassemia major resistant or intolerant to once-daily dose of deferasirox (35 mg/kg/d) were investigated in 2016. Patients were registered at 3 thalassemia referral centers in Shiraz, southern Iran and Tehran, the capital of Iran. All patients were followed for 1 year and monitored by regular physical examination, laboratory data, serum ferritin levels, and heart and liver T2 magnetic resonance imaging. RESULTS Mean age of thalassemia patients was 25.6±8.1 (8 to 40) years, including 22 female individuals and 12 male individuals. Serum ferritin levels significantly decreased during the study period (2021±955 at baseline vs. 1228±894 at the end of the study, P<0.001). Liver T2 magnetic resonance imaging of the patients demonstrated a significant improvement during the study. 73.3% of patients showed normal values at the end of study compared with 28.1% at the baseline (P<0.001). Drug side effects were reported only in 2 patients (5.8%) including 1 patient with abdominal pain and 1 with leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. CONCLUSIONS It seems that deferasirox can be used with increased dose and twice daily with acceptable efficacy in unresponsive or intolerant thalassemia patients to once-daily dose. Close monitoring of the patients is necessary to detect and manage any possible adverse events.
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Low transferrin saturation (TSAT) and high ferritin levels are significant predictors for cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disease and death in maintenance hemodialysis patients.
Kuragano, T, Joki, N, Hase, H, Kitamura, K, Murata, T, Fujimoto, S, Fukatsu, A, Inoue, T, Itakura, Y, Nakanishi, T
PloS one. 2020;(9):e0236277
Abstract
Patients with high serum ferritin and low transferrin saturation (TSAT) levels could be considered as presenting with dysutilization of iron for erythropoiesis. However, the long-term safety of iron administration in these patients has not been well established. An observational multicenter study was performed over 3 years. In 805 patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis (MHD), we defined dysutilization of iron for erythropoiesis in patients with lower TSAT (<20%) and higher ferritin (≥100 ng/mL) levels. A time-dependent Cox hazard model was used for the evaluation of the association between dysutilization of iron for erythropoiesis and adverse events and survival. Patients with low TSAT levels showed an increased risk of cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disease (CCVD) and death compared to patients with normal or higher TSAT levels. Patients with low ferritin and high TSAT levels had a significantly lower risk of CCVD and death compared with patients with high ferritin and low TSAT levels. Higher TSAT levels were associated with male gender, age, the absence of diabetes, low levels of high-sensitivity CRP, and low β2 microglobulin levels, but not with intravenous iron administration or ferritin levels. Although patients with low TSAT levels had a significantly higher risk of CCVD or death, high TSAT levels were not linked with iron administration. Patients, who were suspected of dysutilization of iron for erythropoiesis, had a higher risk of CCVD and death. The administration of iron should be performed cautiously for improving TSAT levels, as iron administration could sustain TSAT levels for a short term.
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Data-driven physiologic thresholds for iron deficiency associated with hematologic decline.
Foy, BH, Li, A, McClung, JP, Ranganath, R, Higgins, JM
American journal of hematology. 2020;(3):302-309
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Abstract
Iron-deficiency contributes to a ∼50% of anemia prevalence worldwide, but reference intervals for iron status tests are not optimized for anemia diagnosis. To address this limitation, we identified the serum ferritin (SF) thresholds associated with hematologic decline in iron-deficient patients, and the SF thresholds from which an SF increase was associated with hematologic improvement. Paired red blood cell and SF measurements were analysed from two adult cohorts at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), from 2008-2011 (N = 48 409), and 2016-2018 (N = 10 042). Inter-patient measurements in the first cohort were used to define optimal SF thresholds based on the physiologic relationship between SF and red cell measurements. Intra-patient measurements (1-26 weeks apart) in the second cohort were used to identify SF thresholds from which an SF increase was associated, with an increase in red cell measurements. The identified optimal SF thresholds varied with age, sex and red cell measure. Thresholds associated with a ∼5% decline in red cell index were typically in the range 10-25 ng/mL. Thresholds for younger women (18-45 year) were ∼5 ng/mL lower than for older women (60-95 years), and ∼10 ng/mL lower than for men. Thresholds from which a subsequent increase in SF was associated with a concomitant increase in red cell measure showed similar patterns: younger women had lower thresholds (∼15 ng/mL) than older women (∼25 ng/mL), or men (∼35 ng/mL). These results suggest that diagnostic accuracy may be improved by setting different SF thresholds for younger women, older women, and men. This study illustrates how clinical databases may provide physiologic evidence for improved diagnostic thresholds.
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Increased ferritin levels in non-transfusion-dependent β°-thalassaemia/HbE are associated with reduced CXCR2 expression and neutrophil migration.
Thiengtavor, C, Siriworadetkun, S, Paiboonsukwong, K, Fucharoen, S, Pattanapanyasat, K, Vadolas, J, Svasti, S, Chaichompoo, P
British journal of haematology. 2020;(1):187-198
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Severe bacterial infection is a major complication causing morbidity and mortality in β-thalassaemia/HbE patients. Innate immunity constitutes the first line of defence against bacterial infection. This study aimed to comprehensively investigate the innate immune phenotype and function related to factors predisposing to infection in non-transfusion-dependent (NTD) β°-thalassaemia/HbE patients. Twenty-six patients and 17 healthy subjects were recruited to determine complement activity (C3, C4, mannose-binding lectin and CH50) and surface receptor expression including markers of phagocytosis (CD11b, CD16 and C3bR), inflammation (C5aR) and migration (CD11b, CXCR1 and CXCR2) on neutrophils and monocytes. In addition, phagocytosis and oxidative burst activity of neutrophils and monocytes against Escherichia coli and neutrophil migration were examined. Decreased C3 and surface expression of CD11b and C3bR on neutrophils were found in patients. However, phagocytosis of neutrophils in patients was still in the normal range. Interestingly, patients displayed a significant reduction of surface expression of CXCR2 [1705 ± 217 mean fluorescent intensity (MFI)] on neutrophils, leading to impaired neutrophil migration (9·2 ± 7·7%) when compared to neutrophils from healthy subjects (2261 ± 627 MFI and 27·8 ± 9% respectively). Moreover, surface expression of CXCR2 on neutrophils was associated with splenectomy status, serum ferritin and haemoglobin levels. Therefore, impaired neutrophil migration could contribute to the increased susceptibility to infection seen in NTD β°-thalassaemia/HbE patients.
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Clinical Laboratory Manifestation and Molecular Diagnosis of β-Thalassemia Patients in Iraq.
AlMosawi, RHN, Al-Rashedi, NAM, Ayoub, NI
Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology. 2020;(1):27-31
Abstract
Many studies determined the demographic and ethnic border of patients with beta (β)-thalassemia mutations and their migration. The effective way to health care policy of β-thalassemia is to prevent homozygote births and reduce the severity of the disease. The objectives of this study contributed to investigating the molecular and serologic characteristics of β-thalassemia patients in Iraq. Peripheral blood samples were collected from 97 β-thalassemia patients and 32 healthy control subjects. Quantitative sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was performed to measure serum ferritin, 25-hydroxy vitamin D, and 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) levels. Further, the β-globin mutation detection assay involving an extensive screening of β-globin mutations by direct Sanger DNA sequencing and gap-PCR was performed to detect the Δ619 deletion mutation. The results revealed that compared with the control subjects, the β-thalassemia patients showed significantly decreased vitamin D levels and significantly increased serum ferritin and 8-OHdG levels (all, P<0.001). Molecular analysis detected 9 types of mutations in the β-thalassemia patients, only 2 of which, namely IVS II-1 G>A and IVS 1-5 G>C, have been previously reported in Iraqi studies, whereas the remaining 7, namely IVS-II-666 C>T, CD2 CAT>CAC, IVS-II-850 G>A, IVS-II-16 GT, have never been reported in the Iraqi population. This study showed that the serum ferritin and 8-OHdG levels were significantly higher, and the serum 25-hydroxy vitamin D levels were significantly lower in the β-thalassemia patients than in the control subjects. Moreover, the results revealed seven newly identified mutations among Iraqi β-thalassemia patients and 2 previously reported mutations.
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Pharmacokinetic, Pharmacodynamic, and Safety Profiles of Ferric Carboxymaltose in Chinese Patients with Iron-deficiency Anemia.
Ding, Y, Zhu, X, Li, X, Zhang, H, Wu, M, Liu, J, Palmen, M, Roubert, B, Li, C
Clinical therapeutics. 2020;(2):276-285
Abstract
PURPOSE Iron deficiency (ID) is one of the most commonly known nutritional deficiencies and is considered the primary cause of anemia (iron-deficiency anemia). Ferric carboxymaltose (FCM), an intravenous iron preparation, has been widely used for >10 years for iron-deficiency anemia treatment worldwide because of its many advantages. METHODS This single-center, open-label, single dose escalation study in Chinese subjects was designed to assess the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic parameters and safety of FCM in this population. The first 12 subjects received a 500-mg dose; after assessing safety data from the first 6 subjects in this cohort, another 12 subjects were assigned to the 1000-mg dose cohort. FINDINGS After an infusion of FCM over 15 min, a rapid dose-dependent increase in total serum iron levels was observed with a median Tmax of 30 min following the start of the infusion for both cohorts. The Cmax and AUC for the 1000-mg dose were ~1.8-fold (p = 0.2929) and 2.3-fold (p = 0.0318) those associated with the 500-mg dose, respectively. Mean terminal t1/2 values were 12.3 and 10.5 h for the 2 cohorts. The renal elimination of FCM was negligible (<0.1%). Increase in mean serum iron levels and ferritin concentrations showed dose dependency. Iron-binding capacity was transiently well utilized after dosing, as indicated by transferrin saturation >88% with 500-mg FCM and >90% with 1000-mg FCM. Hemoglobin levels did not show significant changes during the 7-day observation period, whereas mean reticulocyte counts significantly increased in both cohorts, suggesting activation of the hematopoietic system. FCM was well tolerated in these Chinese subjects. No new or unexpected treatment-emergent adverse events were attributable to FCM. IMPLICATIONS The pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic and safety profiles in Chinese subjects seemed comparable to those in white and Japanese populations. ChinaDrugTrials.org.cn identifier: CTR20160863.
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Iron overload in congenital haemolytic anaemias: role of hepcidin and cytokines and predictive value of ferritin and transferrin saturation.
Barcellini, W, Zaninoni, A, Gregorini, AI, Soverini, G, Duca, L, Fattizzo, B, Giannotta, JA, Pedrotti, P, Vercellati, C, Marcello, AP, et al
British journal of haematology. 2019;(3):523-531
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Iron overload (IO) is poorly investigated in the congenital haemolytic anaemias (CHAs), a heterogeneous group of rare inherited diseases encompassing abnormalities of the erythrocyte membrane and metabolism, and defects of the erythropoiesis. In this study we systematically evaluated routine iron parameters and cardiac and hepatic magnetic resonance imaging, together with erythropoietin, hepcidin, non-transferrin bound iron (NTBI), and cytokine serum levels in patients with different CHAs. We found that 40% of patients had a liver iron concentration (LIC) >4 mg Fe/g dry weight. Hepatic IO was associated with ferritin levels (P = 0·0025), transferrin saturation (TfSat, P = 0·002) and NTBI (P = 0·003). Moreover, ferritin >500 μg/l plus TfSat >60% was demonstrated as the best combination able to identify increased LIC, and TfSat alteration as more important in cases with discordant values. Possible confounding factors, such as transfusions, hepatic disease, metabolic syndrome and hereditary haemochromatosis-associated mutations, had negligible effects on IO. Erythropoietin and hepcidin levels were increased in CHAs compared with controls, correlating with LIC and ferritin, respectively. Regarding cytokines, γ-interferon (IFN-γ) was increased, and both interleukin 6 and IFN-γ levels positively correlated with ferritin and hepcidin levels. Overall, these findings suggest the existence of a vicious cycle between chronic haemolysis, inflammatory response and IO in CHAs.
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Erythropoietin and ferritin response in native highlanders aged 4-19 years from the Leh-Ladakh region of India.
Yanamandra, U, Senee, H, Yanamadra, S, Das, SK, Bhattachar, SA, Das, R, Kumar, S, Malhotra, P, Varma, S, Varma, N, et al
British journal of haematology. 2019;(2):263-268
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The pivotal role of erythropoietin (EPO) in hypoxic adaptation has led to various studies assessing the EPO and ferritin response in native highlanders from Andes and Tibet. We assessed the relationship between EPO, haemoglobin and ferritin in 335 native highlanders (172 boys and 163 girls, aged 4 to 19 years) from Leh-Ladakh, India, who had no history of travel to lowland areas. Complete blood counts, serum EPO and ferritin levels were measured. We stratified study subjects based on age, gender, pubertal status and analysed the EPO and ferritin levels between the stratified groups respectively. The mean EPO level in boys was lower than girls. The mean ferritin level in boys was significantly higher (P = 0·013) than in girls. There was no significant variation in the EPO and ferritin levels amongst the various age groups in our study. Near normal EPO levels since childhood with a negative correlation with haemoglobin is suggestive of a robust adaptive mechanism to high altitude from the early years of life. Low ferritin levels are indicative of decreased iron stores in these native highlanders.
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Changes in the Serum Hepcidin-to-ferritin Ratio with Erythroferrone after Hepatitis C Virus Eradication Using Direct-acting Antiviral Agents.
Inomata, S, Anan, A, Yamauchi, E, Yamauchi, R, Kunimoto, H, Takata, K, Tanaka, T, Yokoyama, K, Morihara, D, Takeyama, Y, et al
Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan). 2019;(20):2915-2922
Abstract
Objective Hepcidin is a master iron regulator hormone produced by the liver, but precise mechanism underlying its involvement in iron overload in hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains unclear. We investigated the serum hepcidin levels against iron overload before and after HCV eradication. Methods We prospectively investigated the iron metabolism characteristics in 24 patients with HCV genotype 1b infection before and after treatment. We also assessed the serum erythroferrone (ERFE) levels to investigate its association with iron metabolism changes. Patients were treated with Ledipasvir 90 mg and Sofosbuvir 400 mg once daily for 12 weeks and observed for 12 more weeks in order to evaluate their sustained virological response. Results Serum hepcidin levels at baseline were in the normal range, although serum ferritin levels were increased. After HCV eradication, both serum ferritin and hepcidin levels were significantly decreased at 24 weeks from baseline (p<0.001, p=0.006, respectively). However, the serum hepcidin-to-ferritin ratios were significantly increased (p<0.001). In addition, the serum ERFE levels were significantly decreased (p<0.001). Increases in the serum hepcidin-to-ferritin ratios were correlated with decreases in the serum ERFE levels (ρ=-0.422, p=0.039). Conclusion Serum hepcidin levels were relatively low against ferritin levels in HCV infection. However, after HCV eradication, the serum hepcidin-to-ferritin ratios were increased. These results indicate the improvement of inadequate hepcidin secretion against iron overload after HCV eradication. Downregulation of ERFE may have affected the improvement of iron metabolism.
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Pulmonary functions in Egyptian children with transfusion-dependent β-thalassemia.
Abd El Hakeem, AA, Mousa, SMO, AbdelFattah, MT, AbdelAziz, AO, Abd El Azeim, SS
Transfusion medicine (Oxford, England). 2019;(1):55-60
Abstract
BACKGROUND In β-thalassemia, there are varying degrees of ineffective haematopoiesis, intermittent haemolysis and iron overload. Excess iron is deposited in organs such as the heart, the liver, the endocrine glands and the lungs. OBJECTIVES To evaluate the pulmonary functions in asymptomatic beta thalassemic children on regular transfusion therapy and their relation to iron overload. METHODS The study included 50 transfusion-dependent β-thalassemic children and 50 apparently healthy children as control. All children had undergone pulmonary function tests (spirometry, lung volumes and diffusion capacities). In addition, test to determine the mean serum ferritin of the last 2 years and pre-transfusion haemoglobin and chest radiograph and echocardiography were performed for the thalassemic children only. RESULTS A total of 70% of the thalassemic children had diffusion impairment, whereas 34% of them had associated restrictive abnormality. Thalassemic children with serum ferritin >2500 ng mL-1 had significantly lower values of forced vital capacity (FVC), forced expiratory volume at one second (FEV1), peak expiratory flow (PEFR), total lung capacity (TLC) and diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide (DLCO) (P < 0·05). Only diffusion impairment had a significant positive correlation with serum ferritin level. Restrictive impairment had significant positive correlations with age, duration of blood transfusion and serum ferritin level and a significant negative correlation with duration of chelation (P < 0·05). Having a serum ferritin >2500 ng mL-1 was the only predicting factor for diffusion impairment and the strongest predicting factor for restrictive dysfunction. CONCLUSION Despite being asymptomatic, the majority of thalassemic children in this study suffered from diffusion impairment either alone or in combination with restrictive dysfunction. These pulmonary dysfunctions correlated significantly with body iron stores measured by serum ferritin.