| Literature DB >> 22287873 |
Abstract
Regular red cell transfusion therapy ameliorates disease-related morbidity and can be lifesaving in patients with various hematological disorders. Transfusion therapy, however, causes progressive iron loading, which, if untreated, results in endocrinopathies, cardiac arrhythmias and congestive heart failure, hepatic fibrosis, and premature death. Iron chelation therapy is used to prevent iron loading, remove excess accumulated iron, detoxify iron, and reverse some of the iron-related complications. Three chelators have undergone extensive testing to date: deferoxamine, deferasirox, and deferiprone (although the latter drug is not currently licensed for use in North America where it is available only through compassionate use programs and research protocols). These chelators differ in their modes of administration, pharmacokinetics, efficacy with regard to organ-specific iron removal, and adverse-effect profiles. These differential properties influence acceptability, tolerability and adherence to therapy, and, ultimately, the effectiveness of treatment. Chelation therapy, therefore, must be individualized, taking into account patient preferences, toxicities, ongoing transfusional iron intake, and the degree of cardiac and hepatic iron loading.Entities:
Keywords: chelation; iron; magnetic resonance imaging; transfusion
Year: 2011 PMID: 22287873 PMCID: PMC3262345 DOI: 10.2147/JBM.S13065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Blood Med ISSN: 1179-2736
Clinical implication of ferritin levels and liver iron concentration
| <2 | <500 | Low iron stores; consider decreasing or holding chelation temporarily |
| 2–7 | 500–1499 | Ideal range; continue current chelation |
| >7–15 | 1500–2500 | Increased iron stores; increase chelator dose |
| >15 | >2500 | Elevated iron stores associated with increased risk of complications and death; increase chelator dose |
Notes:
Ferritin should be obtained when patient is clinically well and vitamin C replete;
chelation should not be held if cardiac iron loading is present (cardiac T2* <20 ms) ;
chelator dose should not exceed approved range (see Table 3).
Clinical implications of cardiac iron assessment by T2* magnetic resonance imaging
| ≥20 | No significant cardiac iron loading; continue current chelation |
| 10 to <20 | Mild to moderate cardiac iron loading with increased risk of cardiac complications; consider intensification of chelation such as increased dose |
| <10 | Severe cardiac iron loading with high risk of cardiac complications; intensify chelation such as increased dose |
Note:
Chelator dose should not exceed approved range (see Table 3).
Properties of iron chelators
| Stoichiometry (chelator: iron) | Hexadentate (1:1) | Tridentate (2:1) | Bidentate (3:1) |
| Usual dose | 25–60 mg/kg/day over 8–24 hours | 20–40 mg/kg/day once daily | 75–100 mg/kg/day in three divided doses |
| Route of administration | Subcutaneous, intravenous | Orally dispersible tablet | Oral tablet or suspension |
| Half-life | 20–30 minutes | 7–16 hours | 1.5–2.5 hours |
| Excretion | Urinary, fecal | Fecal | Urinary |
| Ability to remove liver iron | +++ | +++ | ++[ |
| Ability to remove cardiac iron | ++ | ++[ | +++ |
| Typical adverse events | Local reactions | Gastrointestinal | Gastrointestinal |
| Sensorineural hearing loss | Rash | Neutropenia/Agranulocytosis | |
| Ophthalmic changes | Rise in creatinine | Arthralgia | |
| Allergic reactions | Proteinuria | Elevated hepatic enzymes | |
| Bone abnormalities | Elevated hepatic enzymes | ||
| Increased risk of | Gastrointestinal bleeding (rare) | ||
| Fulminant hepatic failure (rare) | |||
| Pulmonary at high doses | Renal insufficiency (rare) | ||
| Neurological at high doses | |||
| Availability | Licensed | Licensed | Licensed in Europe and Asia as second-line agent; not licensed in North America |
Notes:
Reports of insufficient liver iron removal in some patients at doses of 75 mg/kg/day, but higher dosing, especially for subjects with high transfusional iron burden may be more effective;
with continuous infusion;
data are limited regarding efficacy with very low cardiac T2* and in heart failure; cardiac iron removal also may be less effective in patients with high liver iron concentration.