Hepatic Iron Concentration and Total Body Iron Stores in Thalassemia Major

Emanuele Angelucci(Gruppo Italiano per il Trapianto di Midollo Osseo), Gary M. Brittenham(Columbia University), Christine E. McLaren(University of California, Irvine), Marta Ripalti, D Baronciani, Claudio Giardini, M Galimberti, Paola Polchi, Guido Lucarelli
New England Journal of Medicine
August 3, 2000
Cited by 597Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND METHODS: We tested the usefulness of measuring the hepatic iron concentration to evaluate total body iron stores in patients who had been cured of thalassemia major by bone marrow transplantation and who were undergoing phlebotomy treatment to remove excess iron. RESULTS: We began treatment with phlebotomy a mean (+/-SD) of 4.3+/-2.7 years after transplantation in 48 patients without hepatic cirrhosis. In the group of 25 patients with liver-biopsy samples that were at least 1.0 mg in dry weight, there was a significant correlation between the decrease in the hepatic iron concentration and total body iron stores (r=0.98, P<0.001). Assuming that the hepatic iron concentration is reduced to zero with complete removal of body iron stores during phlebotomy, the amount of total body iron stores (in milligrams per kilogram of body weight) is equivalent to 10.6 times the hepatic iron concentration (in milligrams per gram of liver, dry weight). With the use of this equation, we could reliably estimate total body iron stores as high as 250 mg per kilogram of body weight, with a standard error of less than 7.9. CONCLUSIONS: The hepatic iron concentration is a reliable indicator of total body iron stores in patients with thalassemia major. In patients with transfusion-related iron overload, repeated determinations of the hepatic iron concentration can provide a quantitative means of measuring the long-term iron balance.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis