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Iron Overload in Chronic Anaemias. Dick Wells MD, DPhil, FRCPC Director, Crashley Myelodysplastic Syndrome Research Laboratory Odette Cancer Centre. Preview. Why we need iron The iron economy Why too much iron is a bad thing Pumping (out) iron
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Iron Overload in Chronic Anaemias Dick Wells MD, DPhil, FRCPC Director, Crashley Myelodysplastic Syndrome Research Laboratory Odette Cancer Centre
Preview • Why we need iron • The iron economy • Why too much iron is a bad thing • Pumping (out) iron • Current recommendations for treatment of iron overload in MDS
Why we need iron • Enzymes • Oxygen transport • Haemoglobin (red blood cells) • Myoglobin (muscle cells) • About 70% of the body’s iron is in these proteins
Body Iron Distribution and Storage Adapted with permission from Andrews NC. N Engl J Med. 1999;341:1986–1995
We cope well with iron shortage… • Iron deficiency is the most common deficiency state in the world • Blood loss • diet • About 1000 mg of iron is stored as ferritin (1/3 of total body iron) • Intestinal absorption of iron increases in response to deficiency
…but poorly with iron excess. • Iron is excreted by shedding of intestinal cells • There is no physiologic mechanism to excrete excessive iron
Normal daily iron flux: 1-2 mg Each unit of PRBC: Blood transfusion overwhelms the iron balance 200-250 mg
Summary: Iron is in a fine balance • In normal circumstances, not much iron enters or leaves the body • The body cannot increase its excretion of iron. • Blood transfusions contain much iron, so patients who need frequent transfusions will build up excess iron.
Free Iron Reticuloendothelial System Dying RBC Liver Endocrine organs CIRRHOSIS Heart DIABETES ARRHYTHMIA HEART FAILURE
Lessons from thalassaemia Cardiomyopathy Hypoparathyroidism Hypothyroidism Diabetes Hypogonadism Arrhythmia Hepatic fibrosis Cirrhosis
When does iron become a problem? • Normally 2.5 – 3 grams of iron in the body. • Tissue damage when total body iron is 7 – 15 grams • After 30-50 units of red blood cells
How do we know if there’s too much iron? • Serum ferritin concentration • Used in clinical practice globally • Liver biopsy • Reference methodology (‘gold standard’) • Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) • Investigational, potential for broad access
Serum Ferritin Concentration • Easy • Inexpensive • Can be tricky – not purely iron • Inflammation (acute phase reactant) • Liver function abnormalities • Not perfect marker in iron overload • What it lacks in accuracy it makes up for in part with world-wide availability
Liver Biopsy • The “Gold Standard” • Invasive • Potentially risky Not often used in MDS Direct measurement of iron content
Magnetic Resonance Imaging Bright = high iron concentration; dark areas = low iron concentration
Iron overload impairs survival in MDS RA, RARS, 5q- RCMD, RCMD-RS <1000 >1000 1000-1500 1000-1500 Ferritin Ferritin 1500-2000 1500-2000 >2500 >2500 Proportion surviving ? 40 80 120 40 80 120 Survival time (months) Malcovati, Haematologica, 2006
Summary: Too much iron is bad • Iron overload caused by transfusions causes malfunction of the liver, heart, and endocrine organs. • Problems may begin after 30 units of RBC (or even earlier) • We use serum ferritin level to estimate iron levels • MRI might be better What can we do about it?
Iron chelation Out
Metal Metal What is Chelation Therapy? Toxic Non-Toxic Chelator Chelator OutsidetheBody + “Chelate”
How to chelate? • Currently licensed in Canada: • Deferoxamine (Desferal) • Deferasirox (ICL670, Exjade) • Alternative • Deferiprone (L1) • Available on compassionate release
Deferoxamine works! Survival of patients with thalassaemia No data like these are available for iron chelation in MDS
Challenges of Deferoxamine • Subcutaneous/Intravenous route of administration • Expensive • Cumbersome • Uncomfortable • Rapid metabolism (30 minute half-life) necessitates prolonged infusion (12-15 hours) • Complications due to iron overload still occur due to poor compliance with therapy
Common Side Effects of Deferoxamine • Local reactions • Erythema (localized redness) • Induration (localized swelling) • Pruritus (itchiness) • Ophthalmologic • Reduced visual acuity • Impaired color vision • Night blindness • Increased by presence of diabetes • Hearing loss • Zinc deficiency
Summary: Iron chelation and deferoxamine • Chelation works by attaching a drug to iron, which allows the body to excrete it. • Deferoxamine is awful stuff… • Inconvenient and uncomfortable to take • Many nasty side effects • …but it works • Enormous extension of lifespan in thalassaemia.
ICL670: Deferasirox, Exjade • Oral, dispersible tablet • Taken once daily • Highly specific for iron • Chelated iron excreted mainly in faeces • Less than 10% excreted in the urine
Exjade works. Deferoxamine 0107 ICL670 0107 ICL670 0108 g/L Deferoxamine < 25 25-35 35-50 ≥ 50 ICL670 5 10 20 30 All doses in mg/kg/day
Exjade is Generally Tolerable • The most common adverse events were mild and transient: • Nausea (10%) • Vomiting (9%) • Abdominal pain (14%) • Diarrhea (12%) • Skin rash (8%) • Rarely required discontinuation of drug • Reports of : • Kidney failure • Worsening of blood counts
Exjade is Available (…sort of) • Health Canada approval received Oct 2006 • chronic iron overload in patients with transfusion-dependent anemias aged 6 years old and older. • chronic iron overload in patients with transfusion-dependent anemias aged 2 to 5 years old who cannot be adequately treated with deferoxamine • Provincial formularies still need to decide whether to include Deferasirox.
Canadian Guidelines 2007 • Why: to prevent end-organ complications of iron overload and extend lifespan • Whom: transfusion-dependent patients with expected survival > 1 year or BMT candidates • When: ferritin >1000, TfSat > 0.5 • How: DSX 20 mg/kg/d or DFO 50 mg/kg/d 5/7; target ferritin<1000 Iron Overload in Myelodysplastic Syndromes: A Consensus Guideline. Submitted 2007
Summary • Iron overload is an inevitable consequence of chronic RBC transfusion • Iron toxicity affects the function of the liver, heart, and endocrine organs • Chelation therapy should be offered to iron overloaded patients with life expectancy >1 year • Desferal and Exjade are both effective.