4.4 Article

Inflammation and oxidant-stress in β-thalassemia patients treated with iron chelators deferasirox (ICL670) or deferoxamine: an ancillary study of the Novartis CICL670A0107 trial

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA
Volume 93, Issue 6, Pages 817-825

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.11755

Keywords

iron overload; thalassemia; oxidative stress; inflammation; hsCRP; C-reactive protein; malondialdehyde; lipid peroxidation; vitamin E; vitamin C

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH-NHLBI [U01-HL65232, U01-HL65233, U01-HL65239, U01-HL65244, U01-HL65260, U01-HL65238]
  2. NIH-NCRR [M01-RR01271, UL1-RR024134, M01-RR02172]
  3. NIH-NIDDK [R01-DK57778]

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Background We assessed whether oxidant-stress and inflammation in beta-thalassemia could be controlled by the novel oral iron chelator deferasirox as effectively as by deferoxamine. Design and Methods Forty-nine subjects were enrolled from seven sites and studied at baseline, and after 1, 6, and 12 months of therapy. Malondialdehyde, protein carbonyls, vitamins E and C, total non-transferrin bound iron, transferrin saturation, C-reactive protein, cytokines, serum ferritin concentration and liver iron concentration were measured. Results Liver iron concentration and ferritin declined significantly in both treatment groups during the study. This paralleled a significant decline in the oxidative-stress marker malondialdehyde (deferasirox -22%/year, deferoxamine -28%/year, average decline p=0.006). The rates of decline did not differ between treatment groups. Malondialdehyde was higher in both treatment groups than in a group of 30 non-thalassemic controls (p<0.001). The inflammatory marker high-sensitivity C-reactive protein decreased significantly only in the group receiving deferasirox (deferasirox -51%/year, deferoxamine +8.5%/year, p=0.02). This result was confounded by a chance difference in the level of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein between the two groups at baseline, but analyses controlling for this difference suggested an equally large treatment effect. Conclusions Iron chelation therapy with deferoxamine or with deferasirox was equally effective in decreasing iron burden and malondialdehyde. The possible differential effect of the two chelators on inflammation warrants further investigation.

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