4.7 Article

Pancreatic iron loading predicts cardiac iron loading in thalassemia major

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 114, Issue 19, Pages 4021-4026

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2009-06-225615

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Funding

  1. Cooley's Anemia Foundation
  2. General Clinical Research Center at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles/University of Southern California (National Institutes of Health) [RR00043-43]
  3. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [1 RO1 HL075592-01A1]
  4. Centers for Disease Control (Thalassemia Center) [U27/CCU922106]
  5. Novartis Pharma
  6. Department of Pediatrics, Childrens Hospital Los Angeles

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Diabetes mellitus and cardiomyopathy are common in chronically transfused thalassemia major patients, occurring in the second and third decades of life. We postulated that pancreatic iron deposition would precede cardiac iron loading, representing an environment favorable for extrahepatic iron deposition. To test this hypothesis, we examined pancreatic and cardiac iron in 131 thalassemia major patients over a 4-year period. Cardiac iron (R2* > 50 Hz) was detected in 37.7% of patients and pancreatic iron (R2* > 28 Hz) in 80.4% of patients. Pancreatic and cardiac R2* were correlated (r(2) = 0.52), with significant pancreatic iron occurring nearly a decade earlier than cardiac iron. A pancreatic R2* less than 100 Hz was a powerful negative predictor of cardiac iron, and pancreatic R2* more than 100 Hz had a positive predictive value of more than 60%. In serial analysis, changes in cardiac iron were correlated with changes in pancreatic iron (r(2) = 0.33, P < .001), but not liver iron (r(2) = 0.025, P = .25). As a result, pancreatic R2* measurements offer important early recognition of physiologic conditions suitable for future cardiac iron deposition and complementary information to liver and cardiac iron during chelation therapy. Staging abdominal and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging examinations could significantly reduce costs, magnet time, and need for sedation in young patients. (Blood. 2009; 114: 4021-4026)

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