Thalassemia Syndromes |
1 Sultan Qaboos University
2 Sultan Qaboos University Hospital, Muscat, Oman
3 Imperial College, Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK
Correspondence: Shahina Daar, Sultan Qaboos University, Box 35, P C 123, Muscat, Oman. E-mail:asdoc{at}omantel.net.om
Key words: thalassemia major, Oman, heart, iron overload, magnetic resonance imaging.
Myocardial siderosis in thalassemia major remains the leading cause of death in developed countries despite the use of iron chelating agents over the past three decades. Once cardiac failure occurs, it is difficult to reverse, but early detection could result in a better prognosis through more effective treatment. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) using myocardial T2* has been shown to be a highly sensitive, non-invasive and reproducible technique for detection of myocardial iron content.1 Although serum ferritin is widely used as a measure of iron overload, there is no correlation between serum ferritin and cardiac T2*.2 A recent study has shown detectable cardiac iron in patients aged 15–18 years and none in patients lower than 9.8years.3 At Sultan Qaboos University Hospital, Oman, we investigated the prevalence of cardiac siderosis in a relatively young cohort of patients with thalassemia major (n=81, 10–35 years, mean ±SD: 19±5.8 years). Patients were being treated with either single agent (deferiprone, n=14; deferoxamine, n=1 or combined chelation therapy, n=66). Ejection fraction obtained by standard echocardiography was available for 61 patients. All subjects underwent cardiac and liver T2* studies at baseline and at 3–6 monthly intervals thereafter. Those with moderate or severe cardiac siderosis (cardiac T2* lower than 15 ms), had their therapy optimized with deferiprone doses increased from 75 mg/kg/day to 90–100 mg/kg/day (except one who had had deferiprone-induced agranulocytosis). Follow-up cardiac T2* results were analyzed for 79 patients 15–18 months after baseline studies.
We found that myocardial T2* had no correlation with either serum ferritin or age (Table 1A, Figure 1). As expected, there was a significant correlation between serum ferritin and liver T2* (p<0.001). We found no correlation between ejection fraction and cardiac T2*, which differs from the observations of Anderson.1 However, ejection fraction in our patients was measured by routine echocardiography, which is a less accurate and reproducible technique than CMR.4 The prevalence of myocardial siderosis (T2* <20 ms) in this cohort of Omani patients was high at 46%. This prevalence, however, is lower than the 65% reported in Italian patients who had been on monotherapy with deferoxamine.5 This difference is possibly due to the fact that the majority of our patients had been on combined therapy with deferoxamine (x3–5/week) and deferiprone (75 mg/kg/day) for more than three years (3–7 years, mean 5.1 yrs) and confirms earlier observations that deferiprone appears to have cardioprotective effect with improvement in myocardial overload and reduction in cardiac related deaths.6–8 In 19 patients (23%), cardiac T2* values were 10 ms or less. All 3 patients who had clinical cardiac disease were in this group. What was of more concern was the fact that the other 16 patients were asymptomatic and had normal ejection fractions. These patients are the highest risk of developing clinically significant myocardial complications such as cardiac failure and life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias. A tool like cardiac T2* is thus the only test that can help in identifying at-risk patients who can then be treated aggressively with optimization of their chelation protocols and then more closely followed for impending life-threatening complications.
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Table 1A. Cardiac T2* values (baseline) for 81 Omani patients with thalassemia major.
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Figure 1. Correlation between cardiac T2* and age.
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Table 1B. Family HKM. See text for details.
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Finally, adjusting chelation in heavily iron loaded patients, in particular increasing deferiprone dose, has resulted in a marked improvement in cardiac siderosis. The most severely affected patients (cardiac T2* lower or equal than 10 ms) showed a significant improvement from a mean of 7.3 ms±2.2 at baseline (range 3.4–10.2 ms) to 9.4 ms±3.6 (range 4.8–18.9 ms) at 18 months follow-up (p<0.005).
The availability of T2* MR at our institution has had a significant impact on patient management. All patients with substantial cardiac siderosis (T2* lower than 15 ms) (except one who had had deferiprone-induced agranulocytosis) have had combination therapy,12 with optimization of deferiprone dose from 75 mg/kg/day to 90–100 mg/kg/day, in addition to deferoxamine x3–5 weeks if serum ferritin was greater than 500 ng/mL. T2* CMR is a powerful tool in assessing cardiac siderosis and our results have allowed us to focus on those patients who are at most risk.
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