| Literature DB >> 20871852 |
Abstract
Recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) frequently have iron overload resulting from chronic transfusion therapy for anemia. In some cases, for example, in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes and thalassemia, this can be further exacerbated by increased absorption of iron from the gut as a result of ineffective erythropoiesis. Accumulating evidence has established the negative impact of elevated pretransplantation serum ferritin, a surrogate marker of iron overload, on overall survival and nonrelapse mortality after HSCT. Complications of HSCT associated with iron overload include increased bacterial and fungal infections as well as sinusoidal obstruction syndrome and possibly other regimen-related toxicities. Based on current evidence, particular attention should be paid to prevention and management of iron overload in allogeneic HSCT candidates, especially in patients with thalassemia and myelodysplastic syndromes. The pathophysiology of iron overload in the HSCT patient and optimum strategies to deal with iron overload during and after HSCT require further study.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20871852 PMCID: PMC2943091 DOI: 10.1155/2010/345756
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Hematol
Figure 1Iron overload in patients undergoing HSCT [8]. Dots represent individual patients, thick grey lines show median values, and the boxes indicate interquartile range. Horizontal black line represents a serum ferritin level of 1000 ng/mL. CML: chronic myeloid leukemia; MPD: myeloproliferative disorder [8].
Causes of increased NTBI in HSCT recipients.
| Source of iron | Underlying mechanism |
|---|---|
| Increased intestinal iron absorption due to low hepcidin | (i) Feature of some chronic anemias (e.g., MDS, thalassemia intermedia) |
| (ii) | |
|
| |
| Increased macrophage iron | (i) Red cell transfusion therapy |
|
| |
| Under utilization of plasma iron | (i) Inhibition of erythropoiesis as a result of cytotoxic therapy used as part of the conditioning regimen |
|
| |
| Release of cellular iron | (i) Destruction of bone marrow and tumor cells as a result of cytotoxic therapy used as part of the conditioning regimen |
Figure 2Mean ± SD serum level of the calculated transferrin saturation in 10 allogenic SCT patients during the peritransplantation period. Arrow indicates onset of the conditioning regimen [12].
Published data showing the impact of pretransplantation serum ferritin levels on survival in HSCT recipients.
| Patient type and number | Type of HSCT | Outcome measures | Key results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armand et al. 2007 [ | 590 patients with a variety of disorders (primarily CML, AML, or MDS) | Allogeneic (myeloablative) | Retrospective evaluation of 5-year overall survival, treatment-related mortality, disease-free survival and relapse | (i) Elevated pre-transplantation serum ferritin strongly associated with lower overall- and disease-free survival (ii) Subgroup analysis showed association restricted to patients with AML or MDS |
|
| ||||
| Mahindra et al. 2008 [ | 315 Hodgkin or nonHodgkin lymphoma patients | Autologous | Retrospective evaluation of 6-year overall survival and relapse mortality | (i) Pre-transplantation serum ferritin levels of >685 ng/mL associated with significantly lower overall and relapse-free survival ( |
|
| ||||
| Pullarkat et al. 2008 [ | 190 patients with lymphoma/myeloma or acute leukemia/myeloid malignancy | Allogeneic (myeloablative) | Prospective evaluation of day 100 survival, acute GVHD and infection complications | Elevated serum ferritin (≥1000 ng/mL) associated with (i) increased mortality and decreased overall survival ( |
|
| ||||
| Platzbecker et al. 2008 [ | 172 patients with MDS | Allogeneic (myeloablative) | Retrospective assessment of the impact of transfusion dependence on patient prognosis | Transfusion dependence did not impact directly on overall survival, but transfusion burden, reflected by serum ferritin, correlated with (i) greater probability of acute GVHD ( |
|
| ||||
| Kim et al. 2009 [ | 38 patients with hematologic malignancies | Allogeneic (reduced intensity conditioning) | Retrospective assessment of transplantation outcome after RIST | Elevated serum ferritin (≥1000 ng/mL) resulted in (i) reduced disease-free survival (35.8% versus 80.6% in nonoverloaded patients, |
|
| ||||
| Kataoka et al. 2009 [ | 264 patients with a variety of disorders, (primarily acute myelogenous/lymphoblastic leukemia, CML or MDS) | Allogeneic (myeloablative and nonmyeloablative) | Retrospective evaluation of 5-year survival, nonrelapse mortality, GVHD and infection | Serum ferritin levels of ≥599 ng/mL resulted in: (i) lower overall survival, higher nonrelapse mortality ( |
|
| ||||
| Mahindra et al. 2009 [ | 64 patients with a variety of disorders (primarily AML, nonHodgkin lymphoma, or MDS) | Allogeneic (nonmyeloablative) | Prospective evaluation of 5-year survival | (i) Pre-transplantation serum ferritin levels of >1615 ng/mL associated with significantly lower overall survival ( |
|
| ||||
| Lee et al. 2009 [ | 101 pediatric patients with a variety of disorders (primarily acute lymphoblastic/myeloid leukemia, and aplastic anemia) | Allogeneic (myeloablative) | Retrospective analysis of 5-year survival | (i) Serum ferritin levels of >1000 ng/mL associated with reduced overall and event-free survival ( |
|
| ||||
| Mahindra et al. 2009 [ | 222 patients with myeloid or lymphoid leukemia, nonHodgkin lymphoma or MDS | Allogeneic (myeloablative) | Retrospective evaluation of survival and GVHD | Pre-transplantation serum ferritin levels of >1910 ng/mL resulted in (i) reduced overall and relapse-free survival ( |
AML: acute myeloid leukemia; CML: chronic myeloid leukemia; GVHD: graft-versus-host disease.
Figure 3Prognostic impact of elevated pre-transplantation serum ferritin in patients undergoing myeloablative stem-cell transplantation (N = 190). Dashed line represents patients with serum ferritin over 1000 ng/ml. Adapted from [8].
Figure 4Association of pre-transplantation serum ferritin levels and morbidity [26]. Comorbidity index: 0 = low risk, 1 to 2 = intermediate risk, 3 or more = high risk.
Published guidelines for managing iron overload in HSCT recipients.
| Source of guidelines | Focus of guidelines | Recommendations for management of iron load |
|---|---|---|
| Nagasaki consensus group (2005) [ | Consensus statement on iron overload in MDS | (i) Candidates for allograft could benefit from management of iron load with chelation therapy |
|
| ||
| European Group for Blood and Marrow transplantation, the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research and the American Society for Blood and Marrow transplantation (2006) [ | Long-term survivors of HSCT | (i) Most long-term survivors will have some degree of iron overload (ii) LIC >7 mg Fe/g dry weight (dw) should be treated with phlebotomy and/or chelation therapy |
|
| ||
| MDS Foundation's Working Group on Transfusional Iron Overload (2008) [ | Consensus statement on iron overload in MDS patients | (i) Allograft candidates may benefit from chelation therapy in order to manage body iron levels prior to transplantation in order to avoid iron-related organ dysfunction and transplant-related morbidity and mortality |
|
| ||
| Canadian consensus group (2008) [ | Iron overload in MDS | (i) Consider iron chelation in transfusion-dependent patients who are candidates for allogeneic HSCT |
Figure 5Effect of management of iron levels with iron chelation therapy on outcome in pediatric HSCT patients [30]. Patients receiving iron chelation (IC) therapy to reduce high iron load demonstrated survival levels similar to patients with low serum ferritin (F) levels at transplantation (N = 101).