Beginning chelation treatment with deferoxamine before the age of puberty can help children with transfusion-dependent thalassemia major to attain normal sexual maturation.
In patients with thalassemia intermedia in whom hyperabsorption of iron may result in serious organ dysfunction, an orally effective iron- chelating drug would have major therapeutic advantages, especially for the many patients with thalassemia intermedia in the Third World. We report reduction in tissue iron stores and normalization of serum ferritin concentration after 9-month therapy with the oral chelator 1,2- dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (L1) in a 29-year-old man with thalassemia intermedia and clinically significant iron overload (SF 2,174 micrograms/L, transferrin saturation 100%; elevated AST and ALT, abnormal cardiac radionuclide angiogram) who was enrolled in the study with L1 75 mg/kg/day after he refused deferoxamine therapy. L1-Induced 24-hour urinary iron excretion during the first 6 months of therapy was (mean +/- SD, range) 53 +/- 30 (11 to 109) mg (0.77 mg/kg), declining during the last 3 months of L1 to 24 +/- 14 (13–40) mg (0.36 mg/kg), as serum ferritin decreased steadily to normal range (present value, 251 micrograms/L). Dramatic improvement in signal intensity of the liver and mild improvement in that of the heart was shown by comparison of T1- weighted spin echo magnetic resonance imaging with images obtained immediately before L1 administration was observed after 9 months of L1 therapy. Hepatic iron concentration decreased from 14.6 mg/g dry weight of liver before L1 therapy to 1.9 mg/g liver after 9 months of therapy. This constitutes the first report of normalization of serum ferritin concentration in parallel with demonstrated reduction in tissue iron stores as a result of treatment with L1. Use of L1 as a therapeutic option in patients with thalassemia intermedia and iron overload appears warranted.
Several life-threatening complications of the common disorder sickle cell disease require management with red blood cell transfusions and, hence, long-term iron-chelating therapy. The efficacy of the oral iron chelator 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (L1) has not previously been determined in patients with sickle cell disease. We compared the efficacy of L1 to that of standard-dose subcutaneous deferoxamine in four regularly transfused patients with homozygous sickle cell disease, who had evidence of severe iron overload and a history of poor compliance with deferoxamine. Determination of 24-hour urinary iron excretion conducted over 5 days immediately after transfusion showed that the mean daily urinary iron excretion induced by L1 at 75 mg/kg/d (0.48 +/- 0.23 mg/kg) was equivalent to that induced by deferoxamine at 50 mg/kg/d (0.39 +/- 0.06 mg/kg). In two of three patients studied, a significant (P < .025) increase in mean daily urinary iron excretion was achieved when the dose of L1 was increased to 100 mg/kg/d. Total iron balance studies, which quantitated both urinary and stool iron excretion on L1 and deferoxamine, determined that mean total daily iron excretion induced by deferoxamine (0.88 +/- 0.05 mg/kg) was significantly greater (P < .05) than that induced by L1 (0.53 +/- 0.17 mg/kg), attributable to the significantly greater stool iron excretion during deferoxamine treatment (0.50 +/- 0.16 mg/kg/d) compared with that measured during L1 treatment (0.12 +/- 0.08 mg/kg/d, P < .01). Stool iron excretion accounted for a significantly greater percentage of total iron excretion during deferoxamine treatment (59% +/- 20%) than during L1 treatment (23% +/- 14%, P < .01). These iron balance studies are the first to compare total iron excretion induced by L1 with that achieved by deferoxamine. They demonstrate that the mean total daily iron excretion during L1 treatment (0.53 +/- 0.17 mg/kg) is sufficient to maintain net negative iron balance in most regularly transfused patients with sickle cell disease. Because long-term compliance with L1 has been shown previously to be superior to that with deferoxamine in patients with homozygous beta-thalassemia, the use of L1 should increase the long-term effectiveness of iron chelation in patients with sickle cell disease.
Diamond-Blackfan anemia is a congenital disorder of erythropoiesis in humans, characterized by a macrocytic anemia often associated with physical anomalies. Mutations at either the W or Steel loci in the mouse also leads to a severe macrocytic anemia, as well as other developmental abnormalities. The W locus encodes the proto-oncogene c- kit, a member of the receptor tyrosine kinase family, while the Steel locus encodes a potent hematopoietic growth factor that is the ligand for c-kit. Growth of clonogenic marrow erythroid progenitor cells in vitro in the presence of the recombinant hematopoietic growth factors interleukin-3 (IL-3) and Steel was used to characterize this disease at the cellular level. Three patterns of in vitro marrow response to both recombinant IL-3 or Steel were observed among 10 Diamond-Blackfan patients: those that responded quantitatively and qualitatively almost as well as cells from normal marrow, those that responded at an intermediate level, and those that did not respond at all. These results provide evidence for cellular heterogeneity underlying the pathogenesis of this disorder and therefore raise the possibility that there may be more than one underlying molecular basis for the disease. No gross abnormalities in the structure of either the c-kit or Steel loci were observed in these patients. The normal response in culture of the progenitor cells from at least some patients to Steel with or without IL-3 raises the possibility of using this novel growth factor as a therapeutic agent in Diamond-Blackfan anemia.
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