| Literature DB >> 30214812 |
Edward Litton1,2,3, Stuart Baker4, Wendy Erber5, Shannon Farmer6, Janet Ferrier1, Craig French7,8, Joel Gummer9, David Hawkins10, Alisa Higgins11, Axel Hofmann6, Bart De Keulenaer1, Julie McMorrow12, John K Olynyk13, Toby Richards14, Simon Towler1, Robert Trengove9, Steve Webb2,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Both anaemia and red blood cell (RBC) transfusion are common and associated with adverse outcomes in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). The aim of this study was to determine whether serum hepcidin concentration, measured early after ICU admission in patients with anaemia, could identify a group in whom intravenous (IV) iron therapy decreased the subsequent RBC transfusion requirement.Entities:
Keywords: Anaemia; Critical care; Hepcidin; Intravenous iron; Red blood cell transfusion
Year: 2018 PMID: 30214812 PMCID: PMC6131742 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-018-0328-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Fig. 1Derivation of the cohort
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristic* | Outcome ( |
|---|---|
| Age—years | 62 (41–73) |
| Male gender—no. (%) | 91 (68) |
| ICU admission source—no (%) | |
| Emergency department | 24 (18) |
| Hospital ward | 8 (6) |
| Operating theater | 97 (73) |
| Other hospital | 4 (3) |
| ICU admission type—no (%) | |
| Medical | 17 (13) |
| General surgical | 20 (15) |
| Cardiothoracic | 49 (37) |
| Trauma | 42 (32) |
| Neurosurgical | 5 (4) |
| APACHE II score | 12 (9–17) |
| SOFA score | 6 (4–9) |
| Prior RBC transfusion—no (%) | 30 (23) |
| Haemoglobin—g/L | 88 (81–94) |
| Mean corpuscular volume—fL | 91 (88–94) |
| C reactive protein—mg/L | 110 (48–170) |
| Iron—mcg/dL | 3 (2–6) |
| Ferritin—ng/ml+ | 260 (161–437) |
| Transferrin—mg/dL | 17 (15–20) |
| Transferrin saturation—% | 9 (6–16) |
| Soluble transferrin receptor—mg/L | 1.81 (1.28–2.44) |
| Hepcidin—μg/mL | 34.9 (17.3–69.2) |
| Tertile 1—(0–20.08) | 10.6 (4.2–15.6) |
| Tertile 2—(20.09–53.00) | 34.9 (27.1–48.5) |
| Tertile 3—(53.01–163.46) | 81.2 (69.2–97.9) |
ICU intensive care unit, APACHE acute physiology and chronic health evaluation, SOFA sequential organ failure assessment, RBC red blood cell
*Median and interquartile range (IQR) unless otherwise reported
+ng/ml has a conversion factor of 1 to the standard international units mcg/ml
Hepcidin and risk of RBC transfusion with IV iron therapy
| Variable | IV iron | Placebo | Risk ratio (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hepcidin ≤ 53.0 μg/L | ||||
| Number RBC units/patients | 38/44 | 80/44 | ||
| Median RBC units (IQR) | 1 (0–2) | 1 (0–3) | 0.48 (0.26–0.85) | 0.013 |
| Hepcidin 1st tertile (0–20.1 μg/L) | ||||
| Number RBC units/number patients | 23/22 | 35/21 | ||
| Median RBC units (IQR) | 1 (0–2) | 0 (0–2) | 0.63 (0.26–1.50) | 0.293 |
| Hepcidin 2nd tertile (20.1–53.0 μg/L) | ||||
| Number RBC units/number patients | 15/22 | 45/23 | ||
| Median RBC units (IQR) | 0 (0–1) | 1 (0–3) | 0.35 (0.16–0.77) | 0.009 |
| Hepcidin 3rd tertile (> 53.0 μg/L) | ||||
| Number RBC units/number patients | 43/22 | 34/23 | ||
| Median RBC units (IQR) | 1 (0–3) | 1 (0–3) | 1.33 (0.57–3.08) | 0.518 |
RBC red blood cell, IQR interquartile range
Fig. 2Association between hepcidin concentration and Red Blood Cell units transfused for patients receiving IV iron and placebo
Final multivariate model—independent predictors of RBC transfusion
| Characteristic ( | Coefficient (95% CI) | Risk ratio (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ICU admission type—trauma vs non trauma | 0.833 (0.382–1.285) | 2.30 (1.46–3.61) | < 0.001 |
| Haemoglobin > 80 g/L*—yes vs no | − 0.99 (− 1.493 to − 0.493) | 0.37 (0.22–0.61) | < 0.001 |
| Transferrin saturation—per 10% increase | 0.237 (0.082–0.391) | 1.27 (1.09–1.48) | 0.003 |
| Hepcidin—per 10 μg/ml increase | 0.086 (0.030–0.142) | 1.09 (1.03–1.15) | 0.002 |
CI confidence interval, ICU intensive care unit. Constant for model 0.088 (95% CI − 0.398–0.575)
*Likelihood ratio test for significance of interaction between haemoglobin as a continuous variable and hepcidin concentration in predicting the risk of RBC transfusion p = 0.0462. For patients with a haemoglobin < 80 g/L, there was no significant association between hepcidin concentration and risk of RBC transfusion [RR 0.95 (95% CI 0.84–1.07), p = 0.387]