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Liver iron stores in patients with secondary haemosiderosis under iron chelation therapy with deferoxamine or deferiprone
Author(s) -
Nielsen P.,
Fischer R.,
Engelhardt R.,
Tondüry P.,
Gabbe E. E.,
Janka G. E.
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
british journal of haematology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.907
H-Index - 186
eISSN - 1365-2141
pISSN - 0007-1048
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2141.1995.tb05396.x
Subject(s) - deferiprone , deferoxamine , deferasirox , chelation therapy , medicine , gastroenterology , chelation , hemosiderosis , thalassemia , chemistry , inorganic chemistry
Summary. Total body iron stores including liver and spleen iron were assessed by non‐invasive SQUID biomagnetometry. The liver iron concentration was measured in groups of patients with β‐thalassaemia major or other post‐transfusional siderosis under treatment with the oral iron chelator deferiprone (n = 19) and/or with parenteral deferoxamine (n = 33). An interquartile range for liver iron concentrations of 1680‐4470μg/g liver was found in these patients. In both groups a poor correlation between liver iron and serum ferritin values was observed. Repeated measurements of liver and spleen iron concentrations as well as determination of liver and spleen volume by sonography were performed in six patients under continuous deferiprone treatment for 3‐15 months. In this group detailed information was obtained on the whole body iron store (5‐36 g) and the iron excretion rates (14‐34mg/d) for each patient. As indicated by decreasing liver iron concentrations, five out of six subjects showed a negative iron balance (2‐13 mg/d). Conventional measurements of both serum ferritin and urine iron excretion gave fluctuating results, thus being only of limited use in the control of iron depletion therapy. The non‐invasive biomagnetic liver iron quantification is a precise and clinically verified technique which offers more direct information on the long‐term efficacy of an iron depletion therapy than the hitherto used methods. This technique may be of use in the clinical evaluation of new oral iron chelators.

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