| Literature DB >> 34824033 |
Rodolfo D Cancado1, Aline Morgan Alvarenga2, Paulo Caleb Jl Santos3.
Abstract
Hemochromatosis is currently characterized by the iron overload caused by hepcidin deficiency. Large advances in the knowledge on the hemochromatosis pathophysiology have occurred due to a better understanding of the protein of the iron metabolism, the genetic basis of hemochromatosis and of other iron overload diseases or conditions which can lead to this phenotype. In the present review, the main aims are to show updates on hemochromatosis and to report a practical set of therapeutic recommendations for the human factors engineering protein (HFE) hemochromatosis for the p.Cys282Tyr (C282Y/C282Y) homozygous genotype, elaborated by the Haemochromatosis International Taskforce.Entities:
Keywords: HFE; Hemochromatosis; Iron metabolism; Iron overload
Year: 2021 PMID: 34824033 PMCID: PMC8885398 DOI: 10.1016/j.htct.2021.06.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hematol Transfus Cell Ther ISSN: 2531-1379
Serum ferritin and transferrin saturation values indicated by therapeutic recommendations from the HI taskforce.
| Patients with the HFE p.Cys282Tyr (C282Y/C282Y) homozygous genotype and biochemical evidence of iron overload, i.e., increased serum ferritin (> 300µg/L in males and postmenopausal females and > 200 µg/L in premenopausal females) and increased fasting transferrin saturation (≥ 45%). |
See further data in the Section 2.,,
Data on hemochromatosis types and some genetic diseases that present abnormal values of iron parameters, suggesting hemochromatosis.
| Involved gene | Inheritance | Function of protein encoded by the gene | Values of iron parameters and main clinical aspects for differential diagnosis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autosomal recessive | HFE protein, homeostatic iron regulator, is involved in hepcidin synthesis interacting with transferrin receptor. | Iron overload and known manifestation of classical hemochromatosis (HFE type) | ||
| Autosomal recessive | Hemojuvelin, a BMP co-receptor, is involved in hepcidin synthesis. | Severe iron overload and juvenile form of hemochromatosis | ||
| Autosomal recessive | Hepcidin, produced mainly in hepatocytes, downregulates iron efflux from enterocytes via ferroportin. | Severe iron overload and juvenile form of hemochromatosis | ||
| Autosomal recessive | Transferrin receptor 2, mediates cellular uptake of transferrin-bound iron and is involved in hepcidin synthesis. | The phenotypes can be from mild hemochromatosis- like type 1 to severe juvenile- like form. | ||
| Autosomal recessive | Ferroportin is an iron exporter in the duodenal. | The phenotypes can be from mild hemochromatosis-like type 1 to severe juvenile-like form. | ||
| Autosomal dominant | Ferroportin is an iron exporter in the duodenal. | Increased ferritin and normal/decreased transferrin saturation. Iron magnetic resonance imaging: strong signal in spleen. | ||
| Autosomal dominant | Bone morphogenetic protein 6 is a regulatory molecule of the hepcidin expression. | Increased ferritin and transferrin saturation. Low level of plasma hepcidin. Moderate iron overload. | ||
| Autosomal recessive | Ceruloplasmin is involved in the peroxidation of Fe2+ transferrin to Fe3+ transferrin. | Increased ferritin and normal/decreased transferrin saturation. Microcytic anemia. Iron magnetic resonance imaging: strong signal in the liver. Low levels of ceruloplasmin. | ||
| Autosomal recessive | Transferrin is the iron transporter. | Iron overload and microcytic anemia. Iron magnetic resonance imaging: strong signal in liver and weak signal in spleen. | ||
| Autosomal dominant | Light subunit of the ferritin protein, which is the major intracellular iron storage protein. | Hyperferritinemia with or without cataract. Normal serum iron and transferrin saturation. |
See main clinical manifestations in the “clinical aspects” section.
Hemochromatosis type 4: when SLC40A1 mutation leads to hepcidin resistance (previously called hemochromatosis type 4B).
Ferroportin disease: when SLC40A1 mutation leads to ferroportin loss of function (previously called hemochromatosis type 4A).,,,,
Treatment indicated by therapeutic recommendations from the HI taskforce.
| A phlebotomy schedule on the order of 400 - 500mL, considering body weight, weekly or every two weeks has been proposed. | One phlebotomy every 1 to 4 months, depending on the patient's iron status. |
| Usually, to reach serum ferritin of 50µg/L. | Usually, to maintain ferritin levels around 50µg/L. |
See further data in the Section 3.,14, 15, 16,