| Literature DB >> 23968282 |
Cristina Rosário1, Gisele Zandman-Goddard, Esther G Meyron-Holtz, David P D'Cruz, Yehuda Shoenfeld.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Over the last few years, accumulating data have implicated a role for ferritin as a signaling molecule and direct mediator of the immune system. Hyperferritinemia is associated with a multitude of clinical conditions and with worse prognosis in critically ill patients. DISCUSSION: There are four uncommon medical conditions characterized by high levels of ferritin, namely the macrophage activation syndrome (MAS), adult onset Still's disease (AOSD), catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome (cAPS) and septic shock, that share a similar clinical and laboratory features, and also respond to similar treatments, suggesting a common pathogenic mechanism. Ferritin is known to be a pro-inflammatory mediator inducing expression of pro-inflammatory molecules, yet it has opposing actions as a pro-inflammatory and as an immunosuppressant. We propose that the exceptionally high ferritin levels observed in these uncommon clinical conditions are not just the product of the inflammation but rather may contribute to the development of a cytokine storm.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23968282 PMCID: PMC3751883 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-11-185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1Ferritin structure and function. Ferritin is a major intracellular iron storage protein in all organisms, and its structural properties are largely conserved through species. Apoferritin refers to the iron-free form of the protein; the iron-containing form is termed holoferritin or simply ferritin. Each apoferritin shell comprises 24 subunits of two kinds: a H-subunit and a L-subunit. Depending on the tissue type and physiologic status of the cell, the ratio of H- to L-subunits in ferritin can vary widely. Ferritin H- and L-subunits are mapped on chromosomes 11q23 and 19q13.3, respectively, and both have multiple pseudogenes [1]. H-ferritin plays a major role in the rapid detoxification of iron, while the L-subunit is involved in nucleation, mineralization and long-term storage of iron [10].
Figure 2Control of ferritin expression. The expression of ferritin is regulated at both the transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels by iron, cytokine release, chemokine production, lipopolysaccharide, prostaglandins, hormones, growth factors, second messengers, hyperoxia and hypoxia, and oxidative stress [5]. Cytokines may also affect ferritin translation indirectly through their ability to induce nitric oxide synthase and, hence, increase nitric oxide (NO) (Figure 2) [11,12]. NO, in turn, causes inhibition of ferritin translation. Complex feedback mechanisms between ferritin and cytokines in the control of pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory mediators: cytokines can induce ferritin expression; otherwise, ferritin can induce the expression of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines.
Associations between hyperferritinemia and autoimmune diseases
| RA | 4% [ | ✓ High concentrations of ferritin are found in synovial fluid and synovial cells of RA patients [ |
| ✓ Significant correlations described between serum ferritin levels and disease activity by DAS28 score in RA patients [ | ||
| MS | 8% [ | ✓ Loss of ferritin binding is involved in, or is a consequence of, demyelination associated with MS [ |
| ✓ Ferritin levels are significantly elevated in the serum and the cerebrospinal fluid only in chronic progressive active patients [ | ||
| ✓ Hyperferritinemia is associated with male gender and a more progressive type of MS (that is, relapsing-progressive), whereas an inverse association was noted between the milder form of disease (relapsing-remitting) [ | ||
| SLE | 23% [ | ✓ Serum levels of ferritin during the more active stage of SLE exceeded those of RA patients and patients at less active stages of SLE [ |
| ✓ Hyperferritinemia is associated with serositis and hematological manifestation [ | ||
| ✓ ECLAM score is significantly higher in patients with hyperferritinemia [ | ||
| ✓ Hyperferritinemia is associated with thrombocytopenia, lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies in SLE patients with active disease [ | ||
| APS | Primary APS 8% | ✓ In patients with APS syndrome, hyperferritinemia is associated with the presence of venous thrombotic events, cardiac, neurological and hematological manifestations [ |
| Secondary APS 9% [ |
APS antiphospholipid syndrome, DAS28 Disease Activity Score 28, ECLAM European Consensus Lupus Activity Measurement, MS multiple sclerosis, RA rheumatoid arthritis, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus.
Common clinical manifestations and laboratory abnormalities: MAS, AOSD, cAPS and septic shock
| Hyperferritinemia | + [ | [71%] [ | [70 to 89%] [ | [87 to 100%] [ |
| Range of ferritin levels (ng/mL)* | 21 to 2,210 [ | 250 to 2,875 [ | 223,6 to 54924 [ | 994 to 189,721 [ |
| Hypercytokinemia | + [ | + [ | + [ | + [ |
| Infection as a trigger | [100%] [ | + [ | + [ | + [ |
| Fever | + [ | + [ | [82 to 100%] [ | [78 to 94%] [ |
| Multiorgan involvement | [100%] [ | [100%] [ | + [ | + [ |
| Hepatomegaly | Rare [ | NR | [42%] [ | [61 to 88%] [ |
| Splenomegaly | Rare [ | NR | [22 to 65%] [ | [45 to 59%] [ |
| Hemophagocytosis | + [ | NR | + [ | [81%] [ |
| Thrombocytopenia | + [ | [46%] [ | - | [89%] [ |
| Anemia | + [ | Hemolytic anemia [35%] [ | [68%] [ | [67 to 82%] [ |
| Leukopenia | + [ | NR | - | [39 to 56%] [ |
| Neutropenia | + [ | NR | - | + [ |
| Neutrophilia | + [ | + [ | [81%] [ | - |
| Macrophage activation | + [ | NR | + [ | + [ |
| Low/absent NK activity | + [ | NR | + [ | + [ |
| Sol. IL-2R >2,400 U/ml | + [ | NR | + [ | + [ |
| Abnormal liver function tests | + [ | + [ | [73%] [ | [94%] [ |
| HyperTG | + [ | NR | NR | [77 to 100%] [ |
| Coagulopathy | + [ | DIC [15%] [ | Rare [ | + [ |
| Hypofibrinogenemia | + [ | [15%] [ | Rare [ | [78 to 89%] [ |
| ESR/CRP (↑ or ↓) | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↑ [99%] [ | ESR ↓ [79 to 92%] [ |
[%], percentage of association reported in the literature; +, positive association but not precise percentage reported; -, not associated; NR, no reported association.
CRP C reactive protein, DIC disseminated intravascular coagulation, ESR elevated sedimentation rate, hyperTG hypertriglyceridemia, sol. IL-2R, soluble IL-2 receptor.
* There is only our study on cAPS and it is a small cohort, and there are only a few studies on ferritin levels in sepsis, so the values of ferritin in these two conditions may be underestimated.
Table 2. All four conditions are life-threatening events in which an uncontrolled and immune response, triggered in most cases by infectious agents, leads to a severe hyperinflammation. There is evidence of hypercytokinemia and hyperferritinemia during the symptomatic period of the diseases. With the exception of the cAPS, for which there is no information in the literature, there is an impaired or absent function in natural killer (NK) and cytotoxic T cells.
The effectiveness of common treatment modalities: MAS, AOSD, septic shock and cAPS
| +++ [ | ++ [ | ++ [ | Cyclosporine A [ | |
| +++ [ | ++ [ | + [ | DMARDs [ | |
| +++ [ | +++ [ | +++ [ | Anticoagulation [ | |
| +/− [ | +/− [ | ++ [ | Antibiotics [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory effects of corticosteroids rely on their ability to repress the activity of immunomodulatory transcriptor factors like NF-κB and activator protein-1 [ | Direct antitoxic effects, as well as indirect immunomodulatory mechanisms of IVIG has been described in the literature [ | The overall concept of blood purification is to attenuate the overwhelming systemic overflow of pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators and to restore a broad-based humoral homeostasis [ | ||
| IVIG probably acts by cytokine- and pathogen-specific antibodies [ | ||||
| They are cytotoxic for lymphocytes and inhibit expression of cytokines and differentiation of dendritic cells [ | IVIG prevents release of pro-inflammatory cytokines in human monocytic cells stimulated with procalcitonin [ | It is an extracorporeal blood purification technique designed to remove various toxic and inflammatory mediators and to replenish essential compounds via the replacement plasma [ |
+++ first line treatment recommended in international literature, ++ recommended treatment based in series cases reported in the literature, + treatment used in clinical practice described in case reports, +/− controversial use in clinical practice. AOSD adult onset Still’s disease, cAPS catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome, DMARDs disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, IVIG intravenous immunoglobulin, MAS macrophage activation syndrome, NF-κB nuclear factor kappaB, NR not reported.