| Literature DB >> 29717382 |
Margit Boshuizen1,2, Jan M Binnekade3, Benjamin Nota4, Kirsten van de Groep5,6, Olaf L Cremer5, Pieter R Tuinman7, Janneke Horn3, Marcus J Schultz3, Robin van Bruggen8, Nicole P Juffermans3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anemia occurring as a result of inflammatory processes (anemia of inflammation, AI) has a high prevalence in critically ill patients. Knowledge on changes in iron metabolism during the course of AI is limited, hampering the development of strategies to counteract AI. This case control study aimed to investigate iron metabolism during the development of AI in critically ill patients.Entities:
Keywords: Anemia; Critical care; Hepcidin; Inflammation; Iron; Sepsis
Year: 2018 PMID: 29717382 PMCID: PMC5930297 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-018-0407-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Patient characteristics
| Characteristics | AI ( | Septic controls, high Hb ( | Non-septic controls, high Hb ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male, | 19 (63) | 19 (63) | 19 (63) | 1.00 |
| Age, years median (range) | 64.5 (20–85) | 65.5 (22–81) | 64 (21–79) | 0.99 |
| APACHE IV score median (range) | 82.5 (45–155) | 72 (45–128) | 71 (17–104) | 0.08 |
| Admission type, | ||||
| Surgical ward | 7 (23) | 4 (13) | 7 (23) | 0.66 |
| Medical ward | 17 (57) | 16 (53) | 13 (43) | 0.75 |
| Neurological ward | 6 (20) | 10 (33) | 10 (33) | 0.72 |
| SOFA score median (range) | ||||
| Sampling moment 1 | 7 (3–16) | 7 (3–10) | 5 (0–15) | 0.05 |
| Sampling moment 2 | 6 (3–17) | 6 (1–15) | 5 (2–12) | 0.09 |
| Sampling moment 3 | 5 (2–14) | 5 (1–15) | 4 (1–12) | 0.21 |
| Hemoglobin in mmol/L, mean SD | ||||
| ICU admission | 7.2 (± 0.7) | 8.6 (± 0.8) | 8.4 (± 0.7) | < 0.01 |
| Second sample | 5.6 (± 0.3) | 8.1 (± 0.8) | 8.1 (± 0.6) | < 0.01 |
| Third sample | 5.3 (± 0.3) | 8.1 (± 0.7) | 8.0 (± 0.6) | < 0.01 |
| ICU mortality, | 4 (13) | 2 (7) | 3 (10) | 0.69 |
| Hospital mortality, | 10 (33) | 6 (20) | 9 (30) | 0.49 |
Fig. 1Mean hemoglobin levels over time. Time course of the hemoglobin levels of the three longitudinal sampled groups; anemia of inflammation (AI), septic, high Hb controls and non-septic, high Hb controls. Data are expressed as mean with standard deviation
Fig. 2Iron parameters and IL-6 levels per group over time. Time course of observed plasma iron parameters of the three groups; anemia of inflammation (AI), Septic, high Hb controls, non-septic, high Hb controls. Dotted line represents reference values. Statistically significant differences within the groups over time are indicated with: £ p < 0.05 AI group ‘Day 1 AI’ compared to ‘Admission’, # p < 0.05 non-septic, high Hb group ‘Day 1 AI’ compared to ‘Admission’, $ p < 0.05 non-septic, high Hb group ‘Day 3 AI’ compared to ‘Admission’, * p < 0.05 Septic, high Hb group ‘Day 3 AI’ compared to ‘Admission’, ¤ p < 0.05 AI group ‘Day 3 AI’ compared to ‘Admission’. Data are expressed as median with 25–75 interquartile ranges
Mean estimates of iron parameters derived from the linear mixed model
| Iron parameter | AI | Septic controls, high Hb | Non-septic controls, high Hb |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iron (µmol/L) | 3.8 (3.2–4.5)*† | 5.6 (4.8–6.6) | 6.3 (5.4–7.3) |
| Transferrin (g/L) | 1.3 (1.2–1.5)*† | 1.6 (1.5–1.8) | 1.9 (1.7–2) |
| Transferrin saturation (%) | 10 (8–12)* | 14 (11–16) | 13 (11–15) |
| Ferritin (µg/L) | 1134 (548–2346)† | 473 (229–976) | 314 (152–648) |
| Haptoglobin (g/L) | 3.5 (3.2–3.9)*† | 2.7 (2.4–3) | 2.5 (2.2–2.8) |
| Hepcidin (pg/ml) | 20.7 (15.1–28.5)† | 12.9 (9.4–17.9) | 7.3 (5.4–9.8) |
| Erythroferrone (pg/ml) | 15.5 (9.3–26) | 9.6 (5.8–16) | 18.7 (11.2–31) |
| sTfR (µg/ml) | 0.83 (0.68–1.01) | 0.7 (0.55–0.87) | 0.70 (0.57–0.86) |
| IL-6 (pg/ml) | 14.4 (5.1–40.9)† | 8.0 (1.5–43.0) | 2.0 (0.4–10.9) |
Data are expressed as (back-transformed) mean estimates of iron parameters for all patients per group at all time points, with 95% confidence interval
Differences between mean estimates are tested by contrasts. * p < 0.05 AI compared to septic controls, † p < 0.05 AI compared to non-septic controls