In transfusional iron overload, extra-hepatic iron distribution differs, depending on the underlying condition. Relative mechanisms of plasma non-transferrin bound iron (NTBI) generation may account for these differences. Markers of iron metabolism (plasma NTBI, labile iron, hepcidin, transferrin, monocyte SLC40A1 [ferroportin]), erythropoiesis (growth differentiation factor 15, soluble transferrin receptor) and tissue hypoxia (erythropoietin) were compared in patients with Thalassaemia Major (TM), Sickle Cell Disease and Diamond-Blackfan Anaemia (DBA), with matched transfusion histories. The most striking differences between these conditions were relationships of NTBI to erythropoietic markers, leading us to propose three mechanisms of NTBI generation: iron overload (all), ineffective erythropoiesis (predominantly TM) and low transferrin-iron utilization (DBA).
CITATION STYLE
Porter, J. B., Walter, P. B., Neumayr, L. D., Evans, P., Bansal, S., Garbowski, M., … Vichinsky, E. (2014). Mechanisms of plasma non-transferrin bound iron generation: Insights from comparing transfused diamond blackfan anaemia with sickle cell and thalassaemia patients. British Journal of Haematology, 167(5), 692–696. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjh.13081
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