Low prevalence of cardiac siderosis in heavily iron loaded Egyptian thalassemia major patients

El Beshlawy, Amal; El Tagui, Mona; Hamdy, Mona; El Ghamrawy, Mona; Azim, Khaled Abdel; Salem, Doria; Said, Fadwa; S. IBRAHIM, Ahmed; Pierre, Timothy St; Pennell, Dudley J;

Abstract


Myocardial siderosis in thalassemia major remains the leading cause of death in developing countries. Once heart failure develops, the outlook is usually poor with precipitous deterioration and death. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) can measure cardiac iron deposition directly using the magnetic relaxation time T2. This allows earlier diagnosis and treatment and helps to reduce mortality from this cardiac affection. This study aims to determine the prevalence of cardiac siderosis in Egyptian patients who are heavily iron loaded and its relation to liver iron concentration, serum ferritin, and left ventricular ejection fraction. Eighty-nine β-thalassemia patients receiving chelation therapy (mean age of 20.8 ± 6.4 years) were recruited in this study. Tissue iron levels were determined by CMR with cardiac T2 and liver R2. The mean ± standard deviation (range) of cardiac T2was 28.5 ± 11.7 ms (4.3 to 53.8 ms), the left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was 67.7 ± 4.7 % (55 to 78 %), and the liver iron concentration (LIC) was 26.1 ± 13.4 mg Fe/g dry weight (dw) (1.5 to 56 mg Fe/g dw). The mean serum ferritin was 4,510 ± 2,847 ng/ml (533 to 22,360 ng/ml), and in 83.2 %, the serum ferritin was >2,500 ng/ml. The prevalence of myocardial siderosis (T2of <20 ms) was 24.7 % (mean age 20.9 ± 7.5 years), with mean T2of 12.7 ± 4.4 ms, mean LVEF of 68.6 ±5.8 %, mean LIC of 30.9 ± 13 mg Fe/g dw, and median serum ferritin of 4,996 ng/ml. There was no correlation between T2and age, LVEF, LIC, and serum ferritin (P = 0.65, P = 0.085, P = 0.99, and P = 0.63, respectively). Severe cardiac siderosis (T2of <10 ms) was present in 7.9 %, with a mean age of 18.4 ± 4.4 years. Although these patients had a mean T2of 7.8 ± 1.7 ms, the LVEF was 65.1 ± 6.2 %, and only one patient had heart failure (T2of 4.3 ms and LVEF of 55 %). LIC and serum ferritin results were 29.8 ± 17.0 mg/g and 7,200 ± 6,950 ng/ml, respectively. In this group of severe cardiac siderosis, T2was also not correlated to age (P = 0.5), LVEF (P = 0.14), LIC (P = 0.97), or serum ferritin (P = 0.82). There was a low prevalence of myocardial siderosis in the Egyptian thalassemia patients in spite of very high serum ferritin and high LIC. T2is the best test that can identify at-risk patients who can be managed with optimization of their chelation therapy. The possibility of a genetic component for the resistance to cardiac iron loading in our population should be considered. © 2013 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.


Other data

Title Low prevalence of cardiac siderosis in heavily iron loaded Egyptian thalassemia major patients
Authors El Beshlawy, Amal ; El Tagui, Mona ; Hamdy, Mona ; El Ghamrawy, Mona ; Azim, Khaled Abdel ; Salem, Doria ; Said, Fadwa ; S. IBRAHIM, Ahmed ; Pierre, Timothy St ; Pennell, Dudley J 
Issue Date 2013
Publisher SPRINGER
Journal Annals of Hematology 
DOI 3
375
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84894374893
93
1432-0584
10.1007/s00277-013-1876-0
PubMed ID 93
Scopus ID 2-s2.0-84894374893
Web of science ID WOS:000331044600002

Recommend this item

Similar Items from Core Recommender Database

Google ScholarTM

Check

Citations 16 in scopus
views 8 in Shams Scholar


Items in Ain Shams Scholar are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.