| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||
|
REVIEW ARTICLE
By
From The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and MetroHealth Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH.
THE LAST 3 decades have witnessed profound changes in the management of patients with thalassemia major. Regular red blood cell (RBC) transfusions eliminate the complications of anemia and compensatory bone marrow (BM) expansion, permit normal development throughout childhood, and extend survival.1 In parallel, transfusions result in a "second disease" while treating the first,2 that of the inexorable accumulation of tissue iron that, without treatment, is fatal in the second decade of life. Further altering the prognosis of thalassemia major over the last 20 years has been progress in the development of iron-chelating therapy for iron overload. Deferoxamine mesylate, first introduced in short-term studies in iron-loaded patients in the early 1960s, gained acceptance as standard therapy over a decade later in countries able to support the high costs of this therapy. Twenty years later, extended survival free of iron-induced complications, and dramatically improved quality of life, are observed in well-chelated patients. Indeed, over this period, iron-chelating therapy for thalassemia major has resulted in one of the most dramatic alterations in morbidity and mortality associated with a genetic disease. In this review the experience gained in the use of deferoxamine, the benefits of and problems associated with this agent in the treatment and prevention of iron overload, and recent progress in the development of orally effective iron-chelating drugs will be reviewed.
Adjuncts to the use of chelating therapy to reduce iron accumulation in patients with thalassemia major include the judicious use of transfusion to minimize iron loading while adequately suppressing endogenous erythropoiesis, the appropriate timing of splenectomy to minimize administration of transfusions, and the specific therapy of complications that may result from iron-induced organ damage. These will be briefly reviewed here.
Transfusion Regimens
Type of RBC Concentrates
Splenectomy In patients with thalassemia in whom yearly transfusion requirements exceed 200 mL packed cells per kilogram body weight, splenectomy should significantly diminish RBC requirements and iron accumulation.19,20 Hypersplenism may be avoided by early and regular transfusion; many patients reaching adolescence in this decade have not required splenectomy.21 Because of the risk of postsplenectomy infection, splenectomy should generally be delayed until the age of 5 years or later.22Treatment of Hepatitis Liver disease is reported as a common cause of death after age 15 years in patients with thalassemia.23 Iron-induced hepatic damage is exacerbated by a second complication of transfusions, infection with hepatitis C virus,24,25 the most frequent cause of hepatitis in thalassemic children.26 The high incidence of liver failure and hepatocellular carcinoma in patients who have acquired the virus through transfusions27 supports the use of antiviral therapy for patients with thalassemia. The results of recent trials of interferon- in hepatitis-C-infected patients with thalassemia28,29 suggest that the clinical and pathologic responses to this agent may be inversely related to body iron burden.29 The effectiveness of antiviral therapy in thalassemia may therefore depend on that of iron-chelating therapy; such therapy should be intensified in hepatitis-C-infected patients.
Iron Overload The most important consequence of life-saving transfusions in thalassemia is the inexorable accumulation of iron within tissues, causing progressive organ dysfunction that is fatal without chelating therapy.2 The toxicity of iron has been thoroughly reviewed previously.30 Here, the sites and toxicity of chelatable iron important in patients with thalassemia will be briefly considered.
Nontransferrin-Bound Iron The toxicity of iron is mediated, in part, by its catalysis of reactions which generate free hydroxyl radicals, propagators of oxygen-related damage.30-32 Hydroxyl radicals induce lipid peroxidation of cellular organelles including mitochondria, lysosomes, and sarcoplasmic membranes. Evidence of peroxidant damage has been demonstrated in vivo in the tissues of iron-loaded animals33 and of thalassemic patients.34 Iron unbound to storage or transport proteins is particularly toxic in this regard; in normal individuals, tight binding of plasma iron to the transport protein transferrin prevents the catalytic activity of iron in free radical production.35,36 In very heavily iron-loaded patients, transferrin becomes fully saturated and a nontransferrin-bound fraction of iron becomes detectable in plasma.37-43 Nontransferrin-bound iron may accelerate the formation of free hydroxyl radical41 and facilitate uptake of iron by tissues.35,44 The effectiveness of an iron-chelating agent depends in part on its ability to bind nontransferrin-bound iron over sustained periods of time, thereby decreasing tissue uptake and iron-catalyzed toxic reactions.Chelatable Tissue Iron On delivery to cells by transferrin, iron is immediately available for chelation from a low-molecular-weight iron pool through which the intracellular traffic of iron may pass.45 When this pool is large, it may be toxic to cells with a limited capacity to generate iron storage proteins.46,47 Excess iron is deposited in reticuloendothelial cells, where it appears to be relatively harmless, or in parenchymal tissues, where it may cause significant damage.30Deferoxamine Iron overload may be prevented or treated with a chelating agent capable of complexing with iron and promoting its excretion. The only iron-chelating agent presently available for clinical use is deferoxamine B, a trihydroxamic acid produced by Streptomyces pilosus, with relative specificity for ferric iron.48 Deferoxamine is poorly absorbed orally49 and rapidly metabolized in plasma,50 conferring on the drug its principal drawback: the requirement for prolonged parenteral infusions during which plasma concentrations reach a plateau at 12 hours.30 The sources of iron chelatable by deferoxamine have been thoroughly reviewed.22,30,51,52 Iron bound by deferoxamine is rendered virtually inactive metabolically and deferoxamine can prevent or reverse effects of free radical formation and lipid peroxidation in many experimental systems.33,44,53-57Clinical Use of Deferoxamine Substantial iron excretion was first reported after administration of intramuscular, intravenous (IV),58,59 and subcutaneous bolus injections60 of deferoxamine in the early 1960s. A decade later, chronic intramuscular administration was shown to slow iron accumulation and arrest hepatic fibrosis in transfused patients.61 Over the next 10 years, the effectiveness of 24-hour infusions of IV62,63 and subcutaneous deferoxamine,64,65 the efficacy and feasibility of 12-hour subcutaneous infusions,66 and the substantial fecal iron excretion induced by deferoxamine67 were reported. Together, these studies permitted the design of regimens of nightly subcutaneous deferoxamine using portable ambulatory pumps.64-66 Clinical studies important in our understanding of the use and benefits of deferoxamine are outlined in Table 1.
The Heart In the absence of chelating therapy, myocardial disease remains the life-limiting complication of transfusional iron overload. As detailed over 30 years ago, irregularly transfused, unchelated children frequently developed left ventricular hypertrophy and conduction disturbances by late childhood, and ventricular arrhythmias and refractory congestive failure by the mid-teens.68 Within the heart, even small amounts of unbound iron may generate reactive harmful oxygen metabolites and toxicity, while both chronic pulmonary hypertension69 and myocarditis70 may accelerate iron-induced cardiac failure in thalassemia. These observations may explain the variable correlation observed between the severity of myocardial iron deposition and that of cardiac fibrosis.71,72The Impact of Iron-Chelating Therapy on Cardiac Disease and Survival The beneficial effects of deferoxamine therapy on survival and cardiac disease in patients with thalassemia were first reported in the early 1980s.23,73-80 Over the subsequent decade, several studies observing reduction in morbidity and mortality examined periods of follow-up too short to provide definitive conclusions regarding the long-term benefits of deferoxamine on cardiac disease.81-90 Only in the present decade did patients who started deferoxamine in early childhood reach an age at which long-term survival could be assessed with greater certainty. Two recent trials, both of over 10 years duration, have demonstrated unequivocally that effective long-term use of deferoxamine in thalassemia major is associated with long-term survival free of the complications of iron overload.91,92 Both studies identified the magnitude of the body iron burden as the principal determinant of clinical outcome. One trial used the serum ferritin to evaluate iron loading.91 Over the period of follow-up, patients with most serum ferritin concentrations less than 2,500 µg/L had an estimated cardiac disease free survival of 91% after 15 years, in contrast to patients in whom most serum ferritin concentrations had exceeded 2,500 µg/L, who had an estimated cardiac disease free survival after 15 years of less than 20% (Fig 1). The other trial quantitatively examined the relationship between the total amount of iron administered by transfusion, the cumulative use of deferoxamine and the magnitude of the body iron burden, as assessed by measurements of hepatic iron stores.92 Using a threshold for transfused iron and deferoxamine use that is equivalent to a hepatic storage iron of about 80 µmol iron per gram liver, wet weight (about 15 mg iron per gram liver, dry weight),93 patients were classified as having received ineffective or effective chelation therapy. Ineffective chelating-therapy was associated with the greatest risk of clinical complications and early death in patients with thalassemia major; the probability of survival to at least the age of 25 years was only 32% among patients above the threshold. By contrast, effective chelation helped protect against impaired glucose tolerance, diabetes mellitus, cardiac disease, and early death; no deaths had occurred among patients below the threshold.
The Liver The liver is a major repository of transfused iron. Hepatic parenchymal iron accumulation, demonstrated after only 2 years of transfusion therapy,2 may rapidly result in portal fibrosis in a significant percentage of patients: one center has observed portal fibrosis in a high percentage of biopsies in children under the age of 3 years.94 In young adults with thalassemia major, in whom liver disease remains a common cause of death,23 viral infection24,25 and alcohol ingestion95 may act synergistically with iron in accelerating the development of liver damage.The Impact of Iron-Chelating Therapy on Liver Disease Reports of reduction in liver iron concentration, improvement in laboratory abnormalities of liver function, and arrest of hepatic fibrosis provide evidence for the beneficial effects of subcutaneous deferoxamine on iron loading within the liver.61,96-101 High-dose IV deferoxamine has been reported to achieve the same benefits in patients with massively elevated hepatic iron concentrations.102Endocrine Function and Growth The most common endocrine abnormalities in patients with thalassemia in the modern era include hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, growth hormone deficiency, and diabetes mellitus.103,104 Variable incidences of hypothyroidism,105 hypoparathyrodism,106 and low levels of adrenal androgen secretion with normal glucocorticoid reserve,107 have been less commonly reported. Although normal rates of prepubertal linear growth may be observed in patients maintained on regular transfusion programs,108-110 poor pubertal growth and impaired sexual maturation have been observed in well-transfused patients.107,110-114 Poor pubertal growth has been attributed to iron-induced selective central hypogonadism,105,110,115,116 interference of iron with the production of insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1),117-119 or both. The role of iron is supported by histologic findings of selective iron deposition in pituitary gonadotropes120 and by the reversibility of hypogonadism in primary hemochromatosis with intensive phlebotomy.121,122 Poor pubertal growth has also been attributed to several other causes, including impaired growth hormone responses to growth hormone-releasing hormone,123 abnormalities in growth hormone secretion124 or in the growth hormone-receptor itself125 in the presence of normal growth hormone reserves in most patients126-128; growth may improve with administration of exogenous growth hormone.129,130 Hyposecretion of adrenal androgen,106,107 delay in pubertal development itself,131,132 zinc deficiency,133-135 and free-hemoglobin-induced inhibition of cartilage growth136 have also been implicated in impairment of growth in patients with thalassemia major.Impact of Iron-Chelating Therapy on Endocrine Function and Growth The effectiveness of deferoxamine in the prevention of growth failure and gonadal dysfunction was first reported in a cohort of patients regularly treated since mid-childhood, 90% of whom reached normal puberty. In contrast, in a group of patients who had administered a relatively lower total dose of deferoxamine beginning in the early teens, only 38% achieved normal pubertal status. In both cohorts, final height did not differ significantly from mid-parental height.137 In parallel, a striking increase in fertility in men and women with thalassemia has been reported over the last decade.138 These findings contrast with older,107,110,113 and some recent,139 studies in which a high incidence of gonadal dysfunction in chelated patients has been reported. While insufficient length or intensity of therapy in some of these studies almost certainly explains the lack of reported benefit of deferoxamine in the preservation of pubertal function, it is disappointing to note that secondary ammenorrhea may eventually develop in many thalassemic women with previous evidence of normal pituitary function.139 Intensive deferoxamine administration itself may be associated with impaired linear growth.140-144Impact of Iron-Chelating Therapy on Diabetes Reduction in the risk of diabetes mellitus and glucose intolerance has been reported in patients who used more deferoxamine in relationship to their transfusional iron load, compared to a group who had begun deferoxamine at a more advanced age and had administered therapy less intensively.92Reversal of Iron-Induced Organ Dysfunction Evidence that established iron-induced dysfunction of the heart78,79,85,87 and liver96-101 may improve during intensive deferoxamine therapy has been presented in several reports. Even if administration of deferoxamine does not reverse iron-induced cardiac dysfunction altogether, the outlook for patients who develop cardiac disease in the modern era but who thereafter comply with chelating therapy is strikingly improved, compared with the prognosis reported 30 years ago in similar patients.68 A recent study reported that iron-induced cardiac disease was fatal in most patients in whom body iron burdens remained high, but that extended survivals were observed in patients who had reduced iron stores, as estimated by serum ferritin concentration, 2 years after the onset of this complication.158 In patients with true "end-stage" iron-related disease, both cardiac transplantation159 and combined cardiac and liver transplantation160 has been successful in extending survival in patients with thalassemia major.Management of Chelation Therapy Several practical problems are associated with long-term chelation therapy. One of the most important of these is the accurate assessment of body iron burden, essential to the evaluation of the effectiveness of deferoxamine, as well as to that of new chelators entering clinical trials. As well, issues regarding the appropriate age for the initiation of deferoxamine treatment, the maintenance of balance between its effectiveness and toxicity, and the problems of compliance with deferoxamine arise frequently in the management of patients with thalassemia.
Both direct and indirect means for the assessment of body iron are available but no single indicator or combination of indicators is ideal for the evaluation of iron status in all clinical circumstances (Table 2). Measurement of hepatic iron stores provides the most quantitative means of assessing the body iron burden in patients with thalassemia major161 and may be considered the reference method for comparison with other techniques. Data that have accumulated over the past 10 years permit a quantitative approach to the management of iron overload, and provide guidelines for the control of body iron burden in individual patients treated with chelating therapy.
Indirect Assessment Serum or plasma estimates of body iron burden. The measurement of plasma or serum ferritin is the most commonly used indirect estimate of body iron stores.52,162-166 Normally, ferritin concentrations decrease with depletion of storage iron and increase with storage iron accumulation. A maximum glycosylated plasma ferritin concentration of about 4,000 µg/L may represent the upper physiologic limit of the rate of synthesis167; higher concentrations are thought to be caused by the release of intracellular ferritin from damaged cells. Interpretation of ferritin values may be complicated by a variety of conditions that alter concentrations independently of changes in body iron burden, including ascorbate deficiency, fever, acute infection, chronic inflammation, acute and chronic hepatic damage, hemolysis, and ineffective erythropoiesis,168,169 all of which are common in thalassemia major. In one study of patients with thalassemia major or sickle cell disease, the 95% prediction intervals for hepatic iron concentration, given the plasma ferritin, were so broad as to make determination of plasma ferritin a poor predictor of body stores. As a consequence, reliance on ferritin alone can lead to inaccurate assessment of body iron burden in individual patients (Fig 2). The serum iron, transferrin, transferrin saturation, and transferrin receptor concentration do not quantitatively reflect body iron stores.
Assessment of Organ Function
Direct Assessment Measurement of hepatic iron concentration is the most quantitative, specific, and sensitive method for determining the body iron burden in patients with thalassemia major.208 Liver biopsy is the best direct means of assessing iron deposition, permitting chemical measurement of the nonheme (storage) iron concentration and histochemical examination of the pattern of iron accumulation in hepatocytes and Kupffer cells as well as evaluation of the extent of inflammation, fibrosis, and cirrhosis. Magnetic susceptometry using a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometer provides a direct measure of hepatic storage iron that is based on a fundamental physical property of ferritin and hemosiderin.209-212 Use of the magnetic susceptibility of a tissue to determine the storage iron is much simpler than the use of the resonance behavior produced by the application of the oscillating magnetic fields used in magnetic resonance studies. When body iron stores are increased, the results of noninvasive determinations of magnetic susceptibility and of the chemical analysis of hepatic tissue obtained by biopsy are quantitatively equivalent.209-211 Magnetic susceptometry has been useful in clinical investigation of iron overload but is not generally available, in part because only two sites, one in the United States209 and one in Germany,212 have the specialized equipment needed for measurements of hepatic magnetic susceptibility.
Because the magnitude of the body iron burden seems to be the principal determinant of clinical outcome,91-93 the prime goal of iron-chelating therapy in patients with thalassemia major is the control of body iron. The optimal body iron should minimize both the risk of adverse effects from the iron-chelating agent and the risk of complications from iron overload. With stable transfusion requirements and in the absence of other confounding factors, the lower the level of body iron desired, the higher the dose of iron chelator needed. As detailed below, with many of the adverse reactions encountered with deferoxamine, the higher the dose, the greater the risk of adverse reactions. As a consequence, therapy to maintain a normal body iron, corresponding to a hepatic iron of about 1 to 9 µmol iron per gram liver, wet weight (about 0.2 to 1.6 mg iron per gram liver, dry weight)209 might abate the likelihood of complications of iron overload but greatly increase the probability of dose-related drug toxicity. At the opposite extreme, with high body iron burdens corresponding to hepatic iron concentrations greater than 80 µmol iron per gram liver, wet weight (about 15 mg iron per gram liver, dry weight),92,93 deferoxamine toxicity is rare but the risk of cardiac disease and early death is greatly increased.
Uncertainties as to the optimal age for the start of chelation therapy continue to exist. Reports of abnormal linear growth and metaphyseal dysplasia observed in children treated with deferoxamine before the age of 3 years141-144 have prompted recommendations for later therapy.141 In parallel, ultrastructural observations of liver biopsy specimens in transfused patients with thalassemia, including a unique study of three infants whose biopsies at this early age, have revealed moderate to severe iron overload.94 Furthermore, elevated hepatic iron concentrations associated with hepatic fibrosis, not uniformly evident by determinations of serum ferritin or laboratory abnormalities of liver function, have been observed in transfused thalassemic children less than 3 years of age.221,222 These data suggest that that some modified program of chelating therapy is likely indicated before this age (below and Table 3).
It has been recognized that most toxic effects of deferoxamine have been observed in patients during administration of doses exceeding 50 mg per kilogram body weight, or smaller doses in the presence of very modestly elevated body iron burdens.224 The observation that the toxicity of deferoxamine is enhanced as the serum ferritin concentration declines, and deferoxamine dose increases, is supported by most analyses of this complication.141,142,224-226 As emphasized above, attempts to maintain normal hepatic iron concentrations with deferoxamine in patients with thalassemia major may be associated with increased deferoxamine toxicity.
The most common difficulty associated with long-term therapy with subcutaneous deferoxamine is erratic compliance with therapy, which may decline as supervision of this regimen becomes increasingly the responsibility of the patient; objectively monitored compliance with deferoxamine is less than 70% in many older patients.258 Compliance with deferoxamine may be improved with intensive social and psychological support.259,260
Other Indications for Chelating Therapy
Toxicity of Deferiprone
Iron-chelating therapy with deferoxamine in patients with thalassemia major has dramatically altered the prognosis of this previously fatal disease. The successes achieved with deferoxamine, as well as the limitations of this treatment, have stimulated the design of alternative strategies of iron-chelating therapy, including orally active iron chelators. The development of the most promising of these, deferiprone, has progressed rapidly over the last 5 years; data from several trials have provided direct and supportive evidence for its short-term efficacy. At the same time, the toxicity of this agent mandates a careful evaluation of the balance between risk and benefit of deferiprone in patients with thalassemia, in most of whom long-term deferoxamine is safe and efficacious therapy.
Although support for both the long-term treatment cohort of deferiprone-treated patients93 and a randomized trial of deferiprone and deferoxamine258 was terminated prematurely by their corporate sponsor, APOTEX Pharmaceuticals (Weston, Canada) in 1996, follow-up of hepatic storage iron concentrations in both cohorts have provided information regarding the long-term effectiveness of deferiprone in thalassemia major. In the long-term treatment cohort of deferiprone-treated patients reported previously,93 hepatic iron concentrations are now above the threshold associated with increased risk of heart disease and early death in thalassemia major91 in one third of patients.313 In the randomized trial of deferiprone and deferoxamine,258 review of available hepatic iron concentrations in patients who had completed 2 years of study by August 1996 showed a mean increase in hepatic iron concentration of approximately 50% over baseline in patients treated with deferiprone, but no significant change in those treated with deferoxamine.314 These results, recently reported to the Canadian drug regulatory agency, Health Protection Branch, Ottawa, Canada, raise concerns that long-term therapy with deferiprone may not provide adequate control of body iron in a substantial proportion of patients with thalassemia major.
Submitted February 29, 1996;
accepted October 1, 1996.
1. Weatherall DJ, Clegg JB: The Thalassemia Syndromes (ed 3). Oxford, UK, Blackwell Scientific Publications, 1981
2. Cohen AR: Management of iron overload in the pediatric patient. in Hematol Oncol Clin North Am 521, 1987
3.
Wolman IJ:
Transfusion therapy in Cooley's anemia: Growth and health as related to long range hemoglobin levels. A progress report.
Ann NY Acad Sci
119:736,
1964
4.
Wolman IJ,
Ortolani M:
Some clinical features of Cooley's anemia patients as related to transfusion schedules.
Ann NY Acad Sci
165:407,
1969[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
5.
Piomelli S,
Danoff S,
Becker M,
Lipera M,
Travis S:
Prevention of bone malformations and cardiomegaly in Cooley's anemia by early hypertransfusion regimen.
Ann NY Acad Sci
165:427,
1969[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
6.
Cazzola M,
De Stefano P,
Ponchio L,
Locatelli F,
Dessi C,
Beguin Y,
Barella S,
Dessi C,
Cao A,
Galanello R:
Relationship between transfusion regimen and suppression of erythropoiesis in beta thalassemia major.
Br J Haematol
89:473,
1995[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
7.
Cazzola M,
Locatelli F,
De Stefano P:
Deferoxamine in thalassemia major [letter].
N Engl J Med
332:271,
1995
8.
Propper RD,
Button LN,
Nathan DG:
New approaches to the transfusion management of thalassemia.
Blood
55:55,
1980
9.
Piomelli S,
Seaman C,
Reibman J,
Tyrun A,
Graziano J,
Tabachnik N:
Separation of younger red cells with improved survival in vivo: An approach to chronic transfusion therapy.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
75:3474,
1978
10.
Corash L,
Klein H,
Deisseroth A,
Shafer B,
Rosen S,
Beman J,
Griffith P,
Neinhuis A:
Selective isolation of young erythrocytes for transfusion support of thalassemia major patients.
Blood
57:599,
1981
11.
Bracey AW,
Klein HG,
Chambers S,
Corash L:
Ex-vivo selective isolation of young red blood cells using the IBM-2991 cell washer.
Blood
61:1068,
1983
12.
Cohen AR,
Schmidt JM,
Martin MB,
Barnsley W,
Schwartz E:
Clinical trial of young red cell transfusions.
J Pediatr
104:865,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
13.
Marcus RE,
Wonke B,
Bantock HM,
Thomas MJ,
Parry ES,
Taite H,
Huehns ER:
A prospective trial of young red cells in 48 patients with transfusion-dependent thalassemia.
Br J Haematol
60:153,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
14.
Kevy SV,
Jacobson MS,
Fosburg M,
Renaud M,
Scanlon A,
Carmen R,
Nelson E:
A new approach to neocyte transfusion: Preliminary report.
J Clin Apheresis
4:194,
1988[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
15.
Simon TL,
Sohmer P,
Nelson EF:
Extended survival of neocytes produced by a new system.
Transfusion
29:221,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
16.
Collins AF,
Dias GC,
Haddad S,
Talbot R,
Herst R,
Tyler BJ,
Zuber E,
Blanchette VS,
Olivieri NF:
Evaluation of a new neocyte transfusion preparation vs. washed cell transfusion in patients with homozygous beta thalassemia.
Transfusion
34:517,
1994[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
17.
Cohen AR,
Martin MB,
Silber JH,
Kim HC,
Ohene-Frempong K,
Schwartz E:
A modified transfusion program for prevention of stroke in sickle cell disease.
Blood
79:1657,
1994
18.
Berdoukas VA,
Kwan YL,
Sansotta ML:
A study on the value of red cell exchange transfusion in transfusion dependent anemias.
Clin Lab Haematol
8:209,
1986[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
19.
Modell B:
Total management of thalassaemia major.
Arch Dis Child
52:489,
1977
20.
Cohen A,
Gayer R,
Mizanin J:
Longterm effect of splenectomy on transfusion requirements in thalassemia major.
Am J Hematol
30:254,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
21. Olivieri NF: Unpublished observations, November 1996
22.
Fosburg M,
Nathan DG:
Treatment of Cooley's anemia.
Blood
76:435,
1990
23.
Zurlo MF,
De Stefano P,
Borgna-Pignatti C,
Di Palma A,
Piga A,
Melevendi C,
Di Gregorio F,
Burattini MG,
Terzoli S:
Survival and causes of death in thalassaemia major.
Lancet
2:27,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
24.
Piperno A,
Fargion S,
D'Alba R:
Liver damage in Italian patients with hereditary hemochromatosis is highly influenced by hepatitis B and C virus infection.
J Hepatol
16:364,
1992[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
25. Sher GD, Milone SD, Cameron R, Jamieson FB, Krajden M, Collins AF, Matsui D, Entsuah B, Berkovitch M, Hackman R, Francombe WH, Olivieri NF: Hepatitis C virus infection in transfused patients with
26.
Lai ME,
De Virgilis S,
Argiolu F,
Farci P,
Mazzoleni AP,
Lisci V,
Rapicetta M,
Clemente MG,
Nurchis P,
Arnone M,
Balestrieri A,
Cao A:
Evaluation of antibodies to hepatitis C virus in a long-term prospective study of posttransfusion hepatitis among thalassemic children: Comparison between first- and second-generation assay.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr
16:458,
1993[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
27.
Tong MT,
El-Farra NS,
Reikes AR,
Co RL:
Clinical outcomes after transfusion-associated hepatitis C.
N Engl J Med
332:1463,
1995
28.
Donohue SM,
Wonke B,
Hoffbrand AV,
Reittie J,
Ganeshaguru K,
Scheuer PJ,
Brown D,
Dusheiko G:
Alpha interferon in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C infection in thalassaemia major.
Br J Haematol
83:491,
1993[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
29.
Clemente MG,
Congia M,
Lai ME,
Killiu F,
Lampis R,
Frau F,
Frau MR,
Faa G,
Diana G,
Dessi C,
Melis A,
Mazzoleni AP,
Cornnacchia G,
Cao A,
De Virgiliis S:
Effect of iron overload on the response to recombinant interferon-alfa treatment in transfusion-dependent patients with thalassemia major and chronic hepatitis C.
J Pediatr
125:123,
1994[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
30.
Hershko C,
Weatherall DJ:
Iron-chelating therapy.
CRC Crit Rev Clin Lab Sci
26:303,
1988
31.
Halliwell B,
Gutteridge JMC:
Oxygen toxicity, oxygen radicals, transition metals and disease.
Biochem J
219:1,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
32.
Slater TF:
Free radical mechanisms in tissue injury.
Biochem J
222:1,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
33.
Bacon BR,
Tavill AS,
Brittenham GM,
Park CH,
Recknagel RO:
Hepatic lipid peroxidation in vivo in rats with chronic iron overload.
J Clin Invest
71:429,
1983
34.
Heys AD,
Dormandy TL:
Lipid peroxidation in iron loaded spleens.
Clin Sci
60:295,
1981[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
35.
Hershko C,
Peto TEA:
Annotation: Non-transferrin plasma iron.
Br J Haematol
66:149,
1987[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
36.
Sutton HC:
Efficiency of chelated iron compounds as catalysts for the Haber-Weiss Reacion.
J Free Radical Biol Med
1:195,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
37.
Hershko C,
Graham G,
Bates CW,
Rachmilewitz EA:
Non-specific serum iron in thalassemia: An abnormal serum iron fraction of potential toxicity.
Br J Haematol
40:255,
1978[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
38.
Batey RG,
LaiChung Fong P,
Sherlock S:
The nature of serum iron in primary haemachromatosis.
Clin Sci
55:24,
1978
39.
Anuwatanakulchia M,
Pootrakul P,
Thuvasethakul P,
Wasi P:
Non-transferrin plasma iron in
40.
Wagstaff M,
Peters SW,
Jones BM,
Jacobs A:
Free iron and iron toxicity in iron overload.
Br J Haematol
61:566,
1985
41.
Gutteridge JMC,
Rowley DA,
Griffiths E,
Halliwell B:
Low-molecular-weight iron complexes and oxygen radical reactions in idiopathic haemochromatosis.
Clin Sci
68:463,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
42.
Wang WC,
Ahmed N,
Hanna M:
Non-transferrin-bound iron in long-term transfusion in children with congenital anemias.
J Pediatr
108:552,
1986[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
43.
al-Refaie FN,
Wickens DG,
Wonke B,
Kontoghiorghes GJ,
Hoffbrand AV:
Serum non-transferrin-bound iron in beta-thalassaemia major patients treated with desferrioxamine and L1.
Br J Haematol
82:431,
1992[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
44.
Link G,
Pinson A,
Hershko C:
Heart cells in culture: A model of myocardial iron overload and chelation.
J Lab Clin Med
106:147,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
45.
White GP,
Jacobs A,
Grady RW,
Cerami A:
The use of chang cells cultured in vitro to evaluate potential iron chelating drugs.
Br J Haematol
33:487,
1976[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
46. Jacobs A: in Fitzsimons DW (ed): Iron Metabolism: Ciba Foundation Symposium. Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Elsevier, 1977, p 91
47.
Guterridge JMC,
Halliwell B:
Iron toxicity and oxygen radicals.
Bailliere's Clin Hematol
2:195,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
48.
Keberle H:
The biochemistry of desferrioxamine and its relation to iron metabolism.
Ann NY Acad Sci
119:758,
1964
49.
Callender ST,
Weatherall DJ:
Iron chelation with oral desferrioxamine.
Lancet
2:689,
1980[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
50.
Summers MR,
Jacobs A,
Tudway D,
Perera P,
Ricketts C:
Studies in desferrioxamine and ferrioxamine metabolism in normal and iron-loaded subjects.
Br J Haematol
42:547,
1979[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
51.
Pippard M:
Desferrioxamine induced iron excretion in humans.
Bailliere's Clin Hematol
2:323,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
52. Brittenham GM: Disorders of iron metabolism: Deficiency and overload, in Hoffman R, Benz E, Shattil S, Furie B, Cohen H (eds): Hematology: Basic Principles and Practice. New York, NY, Churchill Livingstone, 1994, p 492
53.
Willis ED:
Lipid peroxide formation in microsomes. The role of non-haem iron.
Biochem J
13:325,
1969
54.
Morehouse LA,
Thomas CE,
Aust SD:
Superoxide generation of NADPH-Cytochrome P-450 reductase: The effect of iron chelators and the role of superoxide in microsomal lipid peroxidation.
Arch Biochem Biophys
232:366,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
55.
O'Connell MJ,
Ward RJ,
Baum H,
Peters TJ:
The role of iron in ferritin- and haemosiderin-mediated lipid peroxidation in liposomes.
Biochem J
229:135,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
56.
Hershko C,
Link G,
Pinson A:
Modification of iron uptake and lipid peroxidation by hypoxia, ascorbic acid and
57.
Link G,
Athias P,
Grynberg A,
Pinson A,
Hershko C:
Effect of iron loading on transmembrane potential, contraction and automaticity of rat ventricular muscle cells in culture.
J Lab Clin Med
113:103,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
58.
Sephton-Smith R:
Iron excretion in thalassaemia major after administration of chelating agents.
Br Med J
2:1577,
1962
59.
Bannerman RM,
Callender ST,
Williams DL:
Effect of desferrioxamine and DTPA in iron overload.
Br Med J
2:1573,
1962
60.
Sephton-Smith R:
Chelating agents in the diagnosis and treatment of iron overload in thalassemia.
Ann NY Acad Sci
119:776,
1964
61.
Barry M,
Flynn D,
Letsky E,
Risdon RA:
Long term chelation therapy in thalassemia major: Effect on liver iron concentration, liver histology and clinical progress.
Br Med J
2:16,
1974
62.
Modell CB,
Beck J:
Long-term desferrioxamine therapy in thalassaemia.
Ann NY Acad Sci
232:201,
1974[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
63.
Propper RD,
Shurin SB,
Nathan DG:
Reassessment of the use of desferrioxamine B in iron overload.
N Engl J Med
294:421,
1976
64.
Hussain MAM,
Flynn DM,
Green N,
Hussein S,
Hoffbrand AV:
Subcutaneous infusion and intramuscular injection of desferrioxamine in patients with transfusional iron overload.
Lancet
2:1278,
1976[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
65.
Propper RL,
Cooper B,
Rufo RR,
Nienhuis AW,
Anderson W,
Bunn HF,
Rosenthal A,
Nathan DG:
Continuous subcutaneous administration of deferoxamine in patients with iron overload.
N Engl J Med
297:418,
1977[Abstract]
66.
Pippard MJ,
Callender ST,
Weatherall DJ:
Intensive iron-chelation therapy with desferrioxamine in iron-loading anaemias.
Clin Sci Mol Med
54:99,
1978[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
67.
Pippard MJ,
Callender ST,
Finch CA:
Ferrioxamine excretion in iron loaded man.
Blood
60:288,
1982
68.
Engle MA,
Erlandson M,
Smith CH:
Late cardiac complications of chronic, severe, refractory anemia with hemochromatosis.
Circulation
30:689,
1964
69.
Grisaru D,
Rachmilewitz FA,
Mosseri M,
Gotsman Latair JS,
Okon E,
Goldfarb A,
Hasin Y:
Cardiopulmonary assessment in
70.
Kremastinos DTh,
Tiniakos G,
Theodorakis GN,
Katritsis DG,
Toutouzas PK:
Myocarditis in
71.
Buja LM,
Roberts W:
Iron in the heart: Etiology and clinical significance.
Am J Med
51:209,
1971[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
72.
MacDonald RA,
Mallory GK:
Haemochromatosis and haemosiderosis: Study of 21 autopsied cases.
Arch Int Med
105:686,
1960
73.
Graziano JH,
Piomelli S,
Hilgartner M,
Giardian P,
Karpatkin M,
Andrew M,
Lo Iacomo N,
Seaman C:
Chelation therapy in
74.
Modell B,
Letsky EA,
Flynn DM,
Peto R,
Weatherall DJ:
Survival and desferrioxamine in thalassaemia major.
Br Med J
284:1081,
1982
75.
Flynn DM,
Hoffbrand AV,
Politis D:
Subcutaneous desferrioxamine: The effects of three years' treatment on liver iron, serum ferritin, and comments on echocardiography.
Birth Defects
18:347,
1982
76.
Weatherall DJ,
Pippard MJ,
Callender ST:
Iron loading in thalassemia
77.
Pippard MJ,
Callender ST:
The management of iron chelation therapy.
Br J Haematol
54:503,
1983[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
78.
Freeman AP,
Giles RW,
Berdoukas VA,
Walsh WF,
Choy D,
Murray PC:
Early left ventricular dysfunction and chelation therapy in thalassemia major.
Ann Intern Med
99:450,
1983
79.
Marcus RE,
Davies SC,
Bantock HM,
Underwood SR,
Walton S,
Huehns ER:
Desferrioxamine to improve cardiac function in iron-overloaded patients with thalassaemia major.
Lancet
1:392,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
80.
Anon:
High-dose chelation therapy in thalassaemia.
Lancet
1:373,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
81.
Hyman CB,
Agness CL,
Rodriguez-Funes R,
Zednikova M:
Combined subcutaneous and high-dose intravenous deferoxamine therapy of thalassemia.
Ann NY Acad Sci
445:293,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
82.
Giardina PJV,
Ehlers KH,
Engle MA,
Grady RW,
Hilgartner MW:
The effect of subcutaneous deferoxamine on the cardiac profile of thalassemia major: A five-year study.
Ann NY Acad Sci
445:282,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
83.
Wolfe L,
Olivieri N,
Sallan D,
Colan S,
Rose V,
Propper R,
Freedman MH,
Nathan DG:
Prevention of cardiac disease by subcutaneous deferoxamine in patients with thalassemia major.
N Engl J Med
312:1600,
1985[Abstract]
84.
Schafer AI,
Rabinowe S,
LeBoff MS,
Bridges K,
Cheron RG,
Dluhy R:
Long-term efficacy of deferoxamine iron chelation therapy in adults with acquired transfusional iron overload.
Arch Intern Med
145:1217,
1985
85.
Rahko PS,
Salerni R,
Uretsky BF:
Successful reversal by chelation therapy of congestive cardiomyopathy due to iron overload.
J Am Coll Cariol
8:426,
1986
86. Brittenham G, Nienhuis A: Desferrioxamine use protects against heart disease and death from transfusional iron overload in thalassemia major. Blood 72:56a, 1988 (abstr, suppl 1)
87.
Aldouri MA WB,
Hoffbrand AV,
Flynn DM,
Ward SE,
Agnew JE,
Hilson AJW:
High incidence of cardiomyopathy in beta-thalassemia patients receing transfusion and iron chelation: reversal by intensified chelation.
Acta Haematol
84:113,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
88.
Lerner N,
Blei F,
Bierman F,
Johnson L,
Piomelli S:
Chelation therapy and cardiac status in older patients with thalassemia major.
Am J Ped Hematol Oncol
12:56,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
89.
Olivieri NF,
McGee A,
Liu P,
Koren G,
Freedman MH,
Benson LN:
Cardiac disease-free survival in patients with thalassemia major treated with subcutaneous deferoxamine.
Ann NY Acad Sci
612:584,
1990
90.
Ehlers KH,
Giardina PJ,
Lesser ML,
Engle MA,
Hilgartner MW:
Prolonged survival in patients with beta-thalassemia major treated with deferoxamine.
J Pediatr
118:549,
1991
91.
Olivieri NF,
Nathan DG,
MacMillan JH,
Wayne AD,
Martin M,
McGee A,
Koren G,
Liu PP,
Cohen AR:
Survival of medically treated patients with homozygous
92.
Brittenham GM,
Griffith PM,
Nienhuis AW,
McLaren CE,
Young NS,
Tucker EE,
Allen CJ,
Farrell DE,
Harris JW:
Efficacy of deferoxamine in preventing complications of iron overload in patients with thalassemia major.
N Engl J Med
331:567,
1994
93.
Olivieri NF,
Brittenham GM,
Matsui D,
Berkovitch M,
Blendis LM,
Cameron RG,
McClelland RA,
Liu PP,
Templeton DM,
Koren G:
Iron-chelation therapy with oral deferiprone in patients with thalassemia major.
N Engl J Med
332:918,
1995
94.
Iancu TC,
Neustein HB. Ferritin in human liver cells of homozygous
95.
Tsukamoto H,
Horne W,
Kamimura S,
Niemelä O,
Parkkila S,
Yiä-Herttula S,
Brittenham GM:
Experimental liver cirrhosis induced by alcohol and iron.
J Clin Invest
96:620,
1995
96.
Hoffbrand AV,
Gorman A,
Laulicht M,
Garidi M,
Economikdou J,
Georgipoulou P,
Hussain MAM,
Flynn DM:
Improvement in iron status and liver function in patients with transfusional iron overload with long-term subcutaneous desferrioxamine.
Lancet
1:946,
1979
97.
Janka GE,
Mohring P,
Helmig M,
Haas RJ,
Betke K:
Intravenous and subcutaneous desferrioxamine therapy in children with severe iron overload.
Eur J Pediatr
137:385,
1981
98.
Cohen A,
Martin M,
Schwartz E:
Response to long-term deferoxamine therapy in thalassemia.
J Pediatr
99:689,
1981[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
99.
Cohen A,
Martin M,
Schwartz E:
Depletion of excessive liver iron stores with desferrioxamine.
Br J Haematol
58:369,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
100.
Cohen A,
Mizanin J,
Schwartz E:
Treatment of iron overload in Cooley's anemia.
Ann NY Acad Sci
445:374,
1985
101.
Aldouri MA,
Wonke B,
Hoffbrand AV,
Flynn DM,
Laulicht M,
Fenton LA,
Scheuer PJ,
Kibbler CC,
Allwood CA,
Brown D,
Thomas HC:
Iron state and hepatic disease in patients with thalassaemia major treated with long term subcutaneous desferrioxamine.
J Clin Pathol
40:1352,
1987
102.
Cohen AR,
Mizanin J,
Schwartz E:
Rapid removal of excessive iron with daily, high-dose intravenous chelation therapy.
J Pediatr
115:151,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
103.
Grundy RG,
Woods RA,
Savage MO,
Evans JPM:
Relationship of endocrinopathy to iron chelation status in young patients with thalassaemia major.
Arch Dis Child
71:128,
1994
104.
Kwan EYW,
Lee ACW,
Li AMC,
Tam SCF,
Chan CF,
Lau YL,
Low LCK:
A cross-sectional study of growth, puberty and endocrine function in patients with thalassaemia major in Hong Kong.
J Paediatr Child Health
31:83,
1995[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
105.
Landau H,
Matoth I,
Landau-Cordova Z,
Goldfarb A,
Rachmilewitz EA,
Glaser B:
Cross-sectional and longitudinal study of the pituitary-thyroid axis in patient with thalassaemia major.
Clin Endocrinol
38:55,
1993[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
106.
McIntosh N:
Endocrinopathy in thalassaemia major.
Arch Dis Child
51:195,
1976
107.
Sklar CA,
Lew LQ,
Yoon DJ,
David R:
Adrenal function in thalassemia major following long term treatment with multiple transfusions and chelation therapy. Evidence for dissociation of cortisol and adrenal androgen secretion.
Am J Dis Child
141:327,
1987
108.
Kattamis C,
Touliatos N,
Haidas S,
Matsaniotis N:
Growth of children with thalassaemia: Effect of different transfusional regimens.
Arch Dis Child
45:502,
1970
109.
Costin G,
Kogut MD,
Hyman CB,
Ortega JA:
Endocrine abnormalities in thalassemia major.
Am J Dis Child
133:497,
1979
110.
Maurer HS,
Lloyd-Still JD,
Ingrisano C,
Gonzalez-Crussi F,
Honig CR. A prospective evaluation of iron chelation therapy in children with severe
111.
Modell B:
Advances in the use of iron-chelating agents for the treatment of iron overload.
Prog Hematol
11:267,
1979[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
112. Modell B, Berdoukas V: The Clinical Approach to Thalassaemia. London, UK, Grune and Stratton, 1984
113.
Borgna-Pignatti C,
De Stefano P,
Zonta L,
Vullo C,
De Sanctis V,
Melevendi C,
Naselli A,
Masera G,
Terzoli S,
Gabutti V,
Piga A:
Growth and sexual maturation in thalassemia major.
J Pediatr
106:150,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
114. Kattamis C, Liakopoulou T, Kattamis A: Growth and development in children with thalassaemia major. Acta Paediatr Scand 366:111, 1990 (suppl)
115.
Kletzky OA,
Costin G,
Marrs RP,
Bernstein G,
March CM,
Mishell DR Jr:
Gonadotropin insufficiency in patients with thalassemia major.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
48:901,
1979
116.
Wang C,
Tso SC,
Todd D:
Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism in severe
117.
Saenger P,
Schwartz E,
Markenson AL,
Graziano JH,
Levine LS,
New AMI,
Hilgartner MW:
Depressed serum somatomedin activity in beta-thalassemia.
J Pediatr
96:214,
1980[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
118.
Werther GA,
Matthews RN,
Burger HG,
Herington AC:
Lack of response of nonsuppressible insulin-like activity to short term administration of human growth hormone in thalassemia major.
J Clin Endocrionol Metab
53:806,
1981
119.
Herington AC,
Werthr GA,
Matthews RN,
Burger HG:
Studies on the possible mechanism for deficiency of nonsuppressible insulin-like activity in thalassemia major.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
52:293,
1981
120.
Bergeron C,
Kovacs K:
Pituitary siderosis: A histologic, immunocytologic, and ultrastructural study.
Am J Pathol
9:295,
1978
121.
Kelly TM,
Edwards CQ,
Meikle AW,
Kushner JP:
Hypogonadism in hemochromatosis: Reversal with iron depletion.
Ann Intern Med
101:629,
1984
122.
Siemons LJ,
Mahler CH:
Hypogonadotropic hyogonadism in hemochromatosis: Recovery of reproductive function after iron depletion.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
65:585,
1987
123.
Pintor C,
Cella G,
Manso P,
Corda R,
Dessi C,
Locatelli V,
Muller EE:
Impaired growth hormone (GH) response to GH-releasing hormone in thalassemia major.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
62:263,
1986
124.
Shehadeh N,
Hazani A,
Rudolf MCJ,
Peleg I,
Benderly A,
Hochberg Z:
Neurosecretory dysfunction of growth hormone secretion in thalassaemia major.
Acta Paediatr Scand
79:790,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
125.
Postel-Vinay MC,
Girot R,
Leger J,
Hocquette JF,
McKelvie P,
Amar-Costesec A,
Rappaport R:
No evidence for a defect in growth hormone binding to liver membranes in thalassemia major.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
68:94,
1989
126.
Masala A,
Melom T,
Gallisai D,
Alagna S,
Rovasio PP,
Rassu S,
Milia AF:
Endocrine functioning in multitransfused prepubertal patients with homogygous
127.
Tolis G,
Politis C,
Kontopoulou I,
Poulatzas N,
Rigas G,
Saridakis C,
Athanasiou V,
Mortoglou A,
Malachtari Ling N:
Pituitary somatotropic and corticotropic function in patients with
128.
Leger J,
Girot R,
Crosnier H,
Postel-Vinay MC,
Rappaport R:
Normal growth hormone (GH) response to GH-releasing hormone in children with thalassemia major before puberty: A possible age-related effect.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
69:453,
1989
129.
Scacchi M,
Danesi L,
De Martin M,
Dubini A,
Forni L,
Masala A,
Gallisai D,
Burrai C,
Terzoli C,
Marzano C,
Cavagnini F:
Treatment with biosynthetic growth hormone of short thalassaemic patients with impaired growth hormone secretion.
Clin Endocrinol
35:335,
1991[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
130.
Low LCK,
Kwan EYW,
Lim YJ,
Lee ACW,
Tam CF,
Lam KSL:
Growth hormone treatment of short Chinese children with
131.
Bozzola M,
Argente J,
Cristernino M,
Moretta A,
Valtorta A,
Biscaldi I,
Donnadieu M,
Evain-Brion D,
Severi F:
Effect of human chorionic gonadotropin on growth velocity and biological growth parameters in adolescents with thalassaemia major.
Eur J Pediatr
148:300,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
132.
Flynn DM,
Fairney A,
Jackson D,
Clayton BE:
Hormonal changes in thalassaemia major.
Arch Dis Child
51:828,
1976
133.
Arcasoy A,
Cavdar A,
Cin S,
Erten J,
Babacan E,
Gozdasoglu S,
Akar N:
Effects of zinc supplementation on linear growth in beta thalassemia (a new approach).
Am J Hematol
24:127,
1987[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
134.
Leek JC,
Vogler JB,
Gershwin ME,
Golub MS,
Hurley LS,
Hendrickx AG:
Studies of marginal zinc deprivation in rhesus monkeys. V. Fetal and infant skeletal effects.
Am J Clin Nutr
40:1203,
1984
135.
Nishi Y,
Hatano S,
Aihara K,
Fujie A,
Kihara M:
Transient partial growth hormone deficiency due to zinc deficiency.
J Am Coll Nutr
8:93,
1989[Abstract]
136.
Vassilopoulou-Sellin R,
Oyedeji CO,
Foster PL,
Thompson MM,
Saman NA:
Haemoglobin as a direct inhibitor of cartilage growth in vitro.
Horm Metab Res
21:11,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
137.
Bronspeigel-Weintrob N,
Olivieri NF,
Tyler BJ,
Andrews D,
Freedman MH,
Holland FJ:
Effect of age at the start of iron chelation therapy on gonadal function in
138.
Jensen CE,
Tuck SM,
Wonke B:
Fertility in thalassaemia major: A report of 16 pregnancies, preconceptual evaluation and a review of the literature.
Br J Obstet Gynaecol
102:625,
1995[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
139.
Chatterjee R,
Katz M,
Cox TF,
Porter JB:
Prospective study of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis in thalassaemic patients who developed secondary amenorrhea.
Clin Endocrinol
39:287,
1993[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
140.
De Sanctis V,
Katz M,
Vullo C,
Bagni B,
Ughi M,
Wonke B:
Effect of different treatment regimes on linear growth and final height in
141.
Rodda CP,
Reid ED,
Johnson S,
Doery J,
Matthews R,
Bowden DK:
Short stature in homozygous
142.
Piga A,
Luzzatto L,
Capalbo P,
Gambotto S,
Tricta F,
Gabutti V:
High-dose desferrioxamine as a cause of growth failure in thalassaemic patients.
Eur J Haematol
40:380,
1988[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
143.
DeVirgilis S,
Congia M,
Frau F,
Argiolu F,
Diana G,
Cucca F,
Varsi A,
Sanna G,
Podda G,
Fodde M,
Franco-Piratu G,
Cao A:
Deferoxamine-induced growth retardation in patients with thalassemia major.
J Pediatr
113:661,
1988[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
144.
Olivieri NF,
Koren G,
Harris J,
Khattak S,
Freedman MH,
Templeton DM,
Bailey JD,
Reilly BJ:
Growth failure and bony changes induced by deferoxamine.
Am J Ped Hematol Oncol
14:48,
1992[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
145.
Lassman MN,
Genel M,
Wise JK,
Hendler R,
Felig P:
Carbohydrate homeostasis and pancreatic islet cell function in thalassemia.
Ann Intern Med
80:65,
1974
146.
Costin G,
Kogut MD,
Hyman C,
Ortega JA:
Carbohydrate metablism and pancreatic islet-cell function in thalassemia major.
Diabetes
26:230,
1977[Abstract]
147.
Saudek CD,
Hemm RM,
Peterson CM:
Abnormal glucose tolerance in
148.
Zuppinger K,
Molinari B,
Hirt A,
Imbach P,
Bugler E,
Tönz O,
Zurbrügg RP:
Increased risk of diabetes melliuts in beta-thalassaemia major.
Hel Paediat Acta
4:197,
1979
149.
De Sanctis V,
D'Ascola G,
Wonke B:
The development of diabetes mellitus and chronic liver disease in long term chelated
150.
De Sanctis V,
Zurlo MG,
Senesi E,
Boffa C,
Cavallo L,
Di Gregorio F:
Insulin dependent diabetes in thalassaemia.
Arch Dis Child
63:58,
1988
151.
Dandona P,
Hussain MAM,
Varghese Z,
Politis D,
Flynn DM,
Hoffbrand AV:
Insulin resistance and iron overload.
Ann Clin Biochem
20:77,
1983
152.
Merkel PA,
Simonson DC,
Amiel SA,
Plewe G,
Sherwin RS,
Pearson HA,
Tamborlane WV:
Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia in patients with thalassemia major treated by hypertransfusion.
N Engl J Med
318:809,
1988[Abstract]
153.
Dmochowski K,
Finegood DT,
Francombe WH,
Tyler B,
Zinman B:
Factors determining glucose tolerance in patients with thalassemia major.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
77:478,
1993[Abstract]
154.
Cavello-Perin P,
Pacini B,
Cerutti F,
Bessone A,
Condo C,
Sacchetti L,
Piga A,
Pagano G:
Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia in homozygous
155. Torrance JD, Charlton RW, Schmaman A, Lynch SR, Bothwell TH: Storage iron in `muscle.' J Clin Path 21:495, 1968
156. Olivieri NF, Ramachandran S, Tyler B, Bril V, Moffatt K, Daneman D: Diabetes mellitus in older patients with thalassemia major: Relationship to severity of iron overload and presence of microvascular complications. Blood 76:72a, 1990 (abstr, suppl 1)
157. Awai M, Yamanoi Y, Kuwashima J, Seno S: Induction mechanism of diabetes by ferric nitriloacetate injection, in Saltman P, Hegenauer J (eds): The Biochemistry and Physiology of Iron. Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Elsevier/North, 1982, p 543
158. Olivieri NF, Snider MA, Nathan DG, Gee B, Muroff A, Martin M, Vichinsky EP, Cohen AR: Survival following the onset of iron-induced cardiac disease in thalassemia major. Blood 86:250a, 1995 (abstr, suppl 1)
159.
Perrimond H,
Michel G,
Orsini A,
Kreitman B,
Metras D:
First report of a cardiac transplantation in a patient with thalassaemia major.
Br J Haematol
78:467,
1991[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
160.
Olivieri NF,
Liu PP,
Sher GD,
Collins AF,
McCusker PJ,
Levy G,
Grieg P,
Daley P,
Francombe WH,
Butany J:
Successful combined cardiac and liver transplantation in an adult with homozygous beta-thalassemia.
N Engl J Med
330:1125,
1994
161.
Pippard MJ:
Measurement of iron status.
Prog Clin Biol Res
309:85,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
162.
Finch CA,
Bellotti V,
Stray SEA:
Plasma ferritin determination as a diagnostic tool.
West J Med
145:657,
1986[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
163.
Brittenham GM,
Danish EH,
Harris JW:
Assessment of bone marrow and body iron stores.
Semin Hematol
18:194,
1981[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
164.
Borgna-Pignatti C,
Castriota-Scanderbeg A:
Methods of evaluating iron stores and efficacy of chelation in transfusional hemosiderosis.
Haematologica
76:409,
1991[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
165.
Brittenham GM,
Cohen AR,
McLaren CE,
Martin MB,
Griffith PM,
Niehuis AW,
Young NS,
Allen CJ,
Farrell DE,
Harris JW:
Hepatic iron stores and plasma ferritin concentration in patients with sickle cell anemia and thalassemia major.
Am J Hematol
42:81,
1993[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
166.
Finch C:
Regulators of iron balance in humans.
Blood
84:1697,
1994
167.
Worwood M,
Cragg SJ,
McLaren C,
Ricketts C,
Economidou J:
Binding of serum ferritin to concanavalin A: Patients with homozygous
168.
Roeser HP,
Halliday JW,
Sizemore DEA:
Serum ferritin in ascorbic acid deficiency.
Br J Haematol
45:457,
1980
169.
Baynes R,
Bezwoda W,
Bothwell T,
Khan Q,
Mansoor N:
The non-immune inflammatory response: Serial changes in plasma iron, iron-binding capacity, lactoferrin, ferritin and C-reactive protein.
Scand J Clin Lab Invest
46:695,
1986[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
170.
Mitnick JS,
Basniak MA,
Megibow AJ,
Karpatkin M,
Feiner HD:
CT in beta-thalassemia: Iron deposition in the liver, spleen, and lymph nodes.
AJR
136:1191,
1981
171.
Long JAJ,
Doppman JL,
Nienbuis AW,
Mills SR:
Computed tomographic analysis of beta-thalassemic syndromes with hemochomatosis: Pathologic findings with clinical and laboratory correlations.
J Comput Assist Tomogr
4:159,
1980[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
172.
Guyader D,
Gandon Y,
Deugnier Y,
Jouanolle H,
Loreal O,
Simon M,
Bourel M,
Carsin M,
Brissol P:
Evaluation of computed tomography in the assessment of liver iron overload. A study of 46 cases of idiopathic hemochromatosis.
Gastroenterology
97:737,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
173.
Houang MTW,
Arozena X,
Skalicka A,
Huehns ER,
Shaw DG:
Correlation between computed tomographic values and liver iron content in thalassaemia major with iron overload.
Lancet
1:1322,
1979[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
174.
Olivieri NF,
Grisaru D,
Daneman A,
Martin DJ,
Rose V,
Freedman MH:
Computed tomography scanning of the liver to determine efficacy of iron chelation therapy in thalassemia major.
J Pediatr
114:427,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
175. Wielopolski L, Zaino EC. Noninvasive in-vivo measurement of hepatic and cardiac iron. J Nucl Med 33:1278, 1992
176.
Stark DD,
Moseley ME,
Bacon BR,
Moss AA:
Magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy of hepatic iron overload.
Radiology
154:137,
1985
177.
Krocker RM,
McVeigh ER,
Hardy P,
Bronskill MJ,
Henkelman RM:
In-vivo measurement of NMR relaxation times.
Magn Reson Med
2:1,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
178.
Kessing P,
Falke T,
Steiner R,
Bloem H,
Peters A:
Magnetic resonance imaging in hemosiderosis.
Diagn Imaging Clin Med
54:7,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
179.
Gomori JM,
Grossman RI,
Drott HR:
MR relaxation times and iron content of thalassemic spleens: An in vitro study.
AJR
150:567,
1988
180.
Hernandez RJ,
Sarnaik SA,
Lande I,
Aisen AM,
Glazer GM,
Chenevert T,
Martel W:
MR evaluation of liver iron overload.
J Comput Assist Tomogr
12:91,
1988[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
181.
Hardy P,
Henkelman RM:
Transverse relaxation rate enhancement caused by magnetic particles.
Magn Reson Imaging
7:265,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
182.
Johnston DL,
Rice L,
Vick GW,
Hedrick TD,
Rokey R:
Assessment of tissue iron overload by nuclear magnetic resonance imaging.
Am J Med
87:40,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
183.
Kaltwasser JP,
Gottschalk R,
Schalk KP,
Hartl W:
Non-invasive quantitation of llver iron-overload by magnetic resonance imaging.
Br J Haematol
74:360,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
184.
Bonkovsky HL,
Slaker DP,
Bills EB,
Wolf DC:
Usefulness and limitations of laboratory and hepatic imaging studies in iron-storage disease.
Gastroenterology
99:1079,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
185.
Chezmar JL,
Nelson RC,
Malko JA,
Bernadino ME:
Hepatic iron overload: Diagnosis and quantification by noninvasive imaging.
Gastrointestinal Radiology
15:27,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
186.
Gomori JM,
Horev G,
Tamary H,
Zandback J,
Korneich L,
Zaizov R,
Freud E,
Krief O,
Ben-Meir J,
Rotem H,
Kuspet M,
Rosen P,
Rachmilewitz EA,
Leewenthal E,
Gorodetskey R:
Hepatic iron overload: Quantitative MR imaging.
Radiology
179:367,
1991
187.
Chan PCK,
Lie P,
Cronin C,
Heathcote J,
Uldall R:
The use of nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in monitoring total body iron in hemadialysis patients with hemosiderosis treated with erythropoietin and phlebotomy.
Am J Kidney Dis
19:484,
1992[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
188.
Villari N,
Caramella D,
Lippi A,
Guazelli C:
Assessment of liver iron overload in thalassemic patients by MR imaging.
Acta Radiol
4:347,
1992
189. Liu P, Olivieri N, Sullivan H, Henkelman M: Magnetic resonance imaging in beta-thalassemia: Detection of iron content and association with cardiac complications. J Am Coll Cardiol 21:491, 1993 (abstr)
190.
Jenson PD,
Jensen FT,
Christensen T,
Ellegaard J:
Non-invasive assessment of tissue iron overload in the liver by magnetic resonance imaging.
Br J Haematol
87:171,
1993
191.
Jensen PD,
Jensen FT,
Christensen T,
Ellegaard J:
Evaluation of transfusional iron overload before and during iron chelation by magnetic resonance imaging of the liver and determination of serum ferritin in adult non-thalassaemic patients.
Br J Haematol
89:880,
1995[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
192.
Olivieri NF,
Koren G,
Matsui D,
Liu PP,
Blendis L,
Cameron R,
McClelland RA,
Templeton DM:
Reduction of tissue iron stores and normalization of serum ferritin during treatment with the oral iron chelator L1 in thalassemia intermedia.
Blood
79:2741,
1992
193.
Liu P,
Henkelman M,
Joshi J,
Hardy P,
Butany J,
Iwanochko M,
Clauberg M,
Dhar M,
Mai D,
Waien S,
Olivieri NF:
Quantitation of cardiac and tissue iron by nuclear magnetic resonance in a novel murine thalassemia-cardiac iron overload model.
Can J Cardiol
12:155,
1996[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
194.
Olson LJ,
Edwards WD,
McCall JT,
Ilstrup DM,
Gersh BJ:
Cardiac iron deposition in idiopathic hemochromatosis: Histologic and analytic assessment of 14 hearts from autopsy.
J Am Coll Cardiol
10:1239,
1987[Abstract]
195.
Fitchett DH,
Coltart DJ,
Littler WA,
Leyland MJ,
Trueman T,
Gozzard DI,
Peters TJ:
Cardiac involvement in secondary haemochromatosis: A catheter biopsy study and analysis of myocardium.
Cardiovasc Res
14:719,
1980[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
196.
Fujisawa I,
Asato R,
Nishimura K,
Togashi K,
Itoh K,
Nakano Y,
Itoh H,
Hashimoto N,
Takeuchi J,
Torizuka K:
Anterior and posterior lobes of the pituitary gland: assessment by 1.5 T MR imaging.
J Comput Assist Tomogr
11:214,
1987[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
197.
Fujisawa I,
Morikawa M,
Nakano Y,
Konishi J:
Hemochromatosis of the pituitary gland: MR imaging.
Radiology
168:213,
1988
198. Berkovitch M, Milone S, Kucharzyk W, Liu P, Papadouris D, Collins AF, Olivieri NF: Differential iron deposition in the anterior pituitary and liver in homozygous beta-thalassemia: Prediction of gonadal failure by magnetic resonance imaging. Blood 82:359a, 1993 (abstr, suppl 1)
199.
Cecchetti G,
Binda A,
Piperno A,
Nador F,
Fargion S,
Fiorelli G:
Cardiac alterations in 36 consecutive patients with idiopathic haemochromatosis: Polygraphic and echocardiographic evaluation.
Eur Heart J
12:224,
1991
200.
Valdes-Cruz L,
Reinenke C,
Rutkowski M,
Dudell GG,
Goldberg SJ,
Allen HD,
Sahn DJ,
Piomelli S:
Preclinical abnormal segmental cardiac manifestations of thalassemia major in children on transfusion-chelation therapy: Echographic alteration of left ventricular posterior wall contraction and relaxation patterns.
Am Heart J
103:505,
1982[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
201.
Olson LJ,
Baldus WP,
Tajik AJ:
Echocardiographic features of idiopathic hemochromatosis.
Am J Cardiol
60:885,
1987[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
202. Benson L, Liu P, Olivieri N, Rose V, Freedom R: Left ventricular function in young adults with thalassemia. Circulation 80:274, 1989 (abstr)
203.
Leon MB,
Borer JS,
Bacharach SL,
Green MV,
Benz EJ Jr,
Griffith P,
Nienhuis AW:
Detection of early cardiac dysfunction in patients with severe beta-thalassemia and chronic iron overload.
N Engl J Med
301:1143,
1979[Abstract]
204.
Spirito P,
Lupi G,
Melevendi C,
Vecchio C:
Restrictive diastolic abnormalities identified by Doppler echocardiography in patients with thalassemia major.
Circulation
82:88,
1990
205.
Liu P,
Olivieri N:
Iron overload cardiomyopathies: New insights into an old disease.
Cardiovasc Drugs Ther
8:101,
1994[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
206.
Hou JW,
Wu MH,
Lin KH,
Lue HC:
Prognostic significance of left ventricular diastolic Indexes in
207.
Lan KC,
Li AMC,
Hui PW,
Yeung CY:
Left ventricular function in
208.
Overmoyer BA,
McLaren CE,
Brittenham GM:
Uniformity of liver density and nonheme (storage) iron distribution.
Arch Pathol Lab Med
111:549,
1987[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
209.
Brittenham GM,
Farrell DE,
Harris JW,
Feldman ES,
Danish EH:
Magnetic-susceptibility measurement of human iron stores.
N Engl J Med
307:1671,
1982[Abstract]
210.
Brittenham GM:
Noninvasive methods for the early detection of hereditary hemochromatosis.
Ann NY Acad Sci
526:199,
1988[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
211.
Pootrakul P,
Kitcharoen K,
Yansukon P,
Wasi P,
Fucharoen S,
Charoenlarp P,
Brittenham G,
Pippard MJ,
Finch CA:
The effect of erythroid hyperplasia on iron balance.
Blood
71:1124,
1988
212.
Nielsen P,
Fischer R,
Engelhardt R,
Tondüry P,
Gabbe EE,
Janka GE:
Liver iron stores in patients with secondary haemosiderosis under iron chelation therapy with deferoxamine or deferiprone.
Br J Haematol
91:827,
1995[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
213.
Feder JN,
Gnirke A,
Thomas W,
Tsuchihashi Z,
Ruddy DA,
Basava A,
Dormishian F,
Domingo Jr. R,
Ellis MC,
Fullan A,
Hinton LM,
Jones NL,
Kimmel BE,
Kronmal GS,
Lauer P,
Lee VK,
Loeb DB,
Mapa FA,
McClelland E,
Meyer NC,
Mintier GA,
Moeller N,
Moore T,
Morikang E,
Prass CE,
Quintana L,
Starnes SM,
Schatzman RC,
Brunke KJ,
Drayna DT,
Risch NJ,
Bacon BR,
Wolff R:
A novel MHC class I-like gene is mutated in patients with hereditary hemochromatosis.
Nat Genet
13:399,
1996[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
214.
Cartwright GE,
Edwards CQ,
Kravitz K,
Skolnick M,
Amos DB,
Johnson A,
Buskjaer L:
Hereditary hemochromatosis: Phenotypic expression of the disease.
N Engl J Med
301:175,
1979[Abstract]
215.
Niederau C,
Fischer R,
Sonnenberg A,
Stremmel W,
Trampisch HJ,
Strohmeyer G:
Survival and causes of death in cirrhotic and in noncirrhotic patients with primary hemochromatosis.
N Engl J Med
313:1256,
1985[Abstract]
216.
Bassett ML,
Halliday JW,
Powell LW:
Value of hepatic iron measurements in early hemochromatosis and determination of the critical iron level associated with fibrosis.
Hepatology
6:24,
1986[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
217.
Niederau C,
Fischer R,
Purschel A,
Stremmel W,
Haussinger D,
Strohmeyer G:
Long-term survival in patients with hereditary hemochromatosis.
Gastroenterology
110:1107,
1996[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
218.
Loreal O,
Deugnier Y,
Moirand R,
Lauvin L,
Guyader D,
Jouanolle H,
Turlin B,
Lescoat G,
Brissot P:
Liver fibrosis in genetic hemochromatosis. Respective roles of iron and non-iron related factors in 127 homozygous patients.
J Hepatol
16:122,
1992[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
219.
Olivieri NF,
Berriman AM,
Davis SA,
Tyler BJ,
Ingram J,
Francombe WH:
Continuous intravenous administration of deferoxamine in adults with severe iron overload.
Am J Hematol
41:61,
1992[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
220. Lai E, Belluzzo N, Muraca MF, Daneman R, Cao A, De Virgiliis S, Lisci V, Galanello R, Olivieri NF: The prognosis for adults with thalassemia major: Sardinia, 1995. Blood 86:251a, 1995 (abstr, suppl 1)
221.
Angelucci E,
Baronciani D,
Lucarelli G,
Baldassarri M,
Galimberti M,
Giardini C,
Martinelli F,
Polchi P,
Posizzi V,
Ripalti M,
Nuretto P:
Needle liver biopsy in thalassaemia: Analyses of diagnostic accuracy and safety in 1184 consecutive biopsies.
Br J Haematol
89:757,
1994
222. Berkovitch M, Collins AF, Papadouris D, Wesson D, Sirna JB, Brittenham GB, Olivieri NF: Need for early, low-dose chelation therapy in young children with transfused homozygous
223. DeVirgiliis S: Personal communication. Sardinia, July 1995
224.
Porter J,
Huehns E:
The toxic effects of desferrioxamine.
Balliere's Clin Hematol
2:459,
1989
225.
Olivieri NF,
Buncic R,
Chew E,
Gallant T,
Harrison RV,
Keenan N,
Logan W,
Mitchell D,
Ricci G,
Skarf B,
Taylor M,
Freedman MH:
Visual and auditory neurotoxicity in patients receiving subcutaneous deferoxamine infusions.
N Engl J Med
314:869,
1986[Abstract]
226.
Porter JB,
Jaswon MS,
Huehns ER,
East CA,
Hazell JWP:
Desferrioxamine ototoxicity: Evaluation of risk factors in thalassaemic patients and guidelines for safe dosage.
Br J Haematol
73:403,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
227.
Bloomfield SE,
Markenson AI,
Miller DR,
Peterson CM:
Lens opacities in thalassemia.
J Pediatr Ophtholmol Strab
15:154,
1978
227a. Marsh M, Holbrook I, Clark C, Shaffer J: Tinnitus in a patient with beta thalassaemia intermedia on long term treatment with desferrioxamine. Postgrad Med J 57:582, 1981
228.
Porter J,
Huehns E:
The toxic effects of desferrioxamine.
Bailliere's Clin Hematol
2:459,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
229.
Davies SC,
Hungerford JL,
Arden GB,
Marcus RE,
Miller MH,
Huehns ER:
Ocular toxicity of high-dose intravenous desferrioxamine.
Lancet
2:181,
1983[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
230.
Borgna-Pignatti C,
De Stefano P,
Broglia AM:
Visual loss in a patient on high-dose subcutaneous desferrioxamine.
Lancet
1:681,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
231.
Orton R,
Veber L,
Sulh II:
Ocular and auditory toxicity of high dose subcutaneous deferoxamine therapy.
Can J Ophthalmol
20:153,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
232.
Rahi AHS,
Hungerford JL,
Ahmed A:
Ocular toxicity of desferrioxamine: Light microscopic, histochemical and ultrastructural findings.
Br J Ophtholmol
70:373,
1986
233.
Dickerhoff R:
Acute aphasia and loss of vision with desferrioxamine overdose.
Am J Ped Hematol Oncol
9:287,
1987[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
234.
De Virgiliis S,
Turco MP,
Frau F,
Dessi C,
Argiolu F,
Sorcinelli R,
Sitzia A,
Cao A:
Depletion of trace elements and acute ocular toxicity induced by desferrioxamine in patients with thalassaemia.
Arch Dis Chil
63:250,
1988
235.
Pall H,
Blake D,
Winyard P,
Lunee J,
Williams A,
Good P,
Kritzinger E,
Lornish A,
Hider R:
Ocular toxicity of desferrioxamine: An example of copper promoted auto-oxidative damage.
Br J Ophthalmol
73:42,
1989
236. Giardina PJ, Nealon N, McQueen M, Martin M, Schotland D, Cohen A: Sensorimotor neuropathy associated with high dose desferrioxamine. Blood 78:199a, 1993 (abstr, suppl 1)
237.
Koren G,
Bentur Y,
Strong D,
Harvey E,
Klein J,
Baumal R,
Spielberg SP,
Freedman MH:
Acute changes in renal function associated with deferoxamine therapy.
Am J Dis Child
143:1077,
1989
238.
Koren G,
Kochavi-Atiya Y,
Bentur Y,
Olivieri NF:
The effects of subcutaneous deferoxamine administration on renal function in thalassemia major.
Int J Haematol
54:371,
1992
239.
Freedman MH,
Olivieri NF,
Grisaru D,
Mcluskey I,
Thorner P:
Pulmonary syndrome in patients receiving intravenous deferoxamine infusions.
Am J Dis Child
144:565,
1990
240.
Tenenbein M,
Kowalski S,
Sienko A,
Bowden DH,
Adamson IYR:
Pulmonary toxic effects of continuous desferrioxamine administration in acute iron poisoning.
Lancet
339:699,
1992[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
241.
Brill PW,
Winchester P,
Giardina PJ,
Cunningham-Rundles S:
Desferrioxamine-induced bone dysplasia in patients with thalassaemia major.
Am J Roentgenol
156:561,
1991
242.
Orxincolo C,
Scutellari PN,
Castaldi G:
Growth plate injury of the long bones in treated
243. Sher GD, Belluzzo N, Babyn P, Collins AF, Bailey JD, Olivieri NF: Improvement in deferoxamine-induced bony abnormalities in transfusion-dependent patients following withdrawal or reduction of deferoxamine and initiation of the oral chelator L1. Blood 82:360a, 1993 (abstr, suppl 1)
244.
Hartkamp MJ,
Babyn PS,
Olivieri NF:
Spinal deformities in deferoxamine-treated beta-thalassemia major patients.
Ped Radiol
23:525,
1993[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
245.
Hatori M,
Sparkman J,
Teixeira CC,
Grynpas M,
Nervina J,
Olivieri N,
Shapiro IM:
Effects of deferoxamine on chondrocyte alkaline phosphatase activity: pro-oxidant role of deferoxamine in thalassemia.
Calcif Tissue Int
57:229,
1995[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
246. Olivieri NF, Basran RK, Talbot AL, Babyn P, Bailey JD: Abnormal growth in thalassemia major associated with deferoxamine-induced destruction of spinal cartilage and compromise of sitting height. Blood 86:482a, 1995 (abstr, suppl 1)
247. De Sanctis V, Pinamonti A, Di Palma A, Sprocati M, Atti G, Ganberini MR, Vullo C: Growth and development in thalassaemia major patients with severe bone lesions due to desferrioxamine. Eur J Pediatr 1996 (in press)
248.
O'Brien RT:
Ascorbic acid enhancement of desferrioxamine-induced urinary iron excretion in thalassemia major.
Ann NY Acad Sci
232:221,
1974[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
249.
Cohen A,
Cohen IJ,
Schwartz E:
Scurvy and altered iron stores in thalassemia major.
N Engl J Med
304:158,
1981[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
250.
Chapman RWG,
Hussein MAM,
Gorman A,
Laulicht M,
Politis D,
Flynn DM,
Sherlock S,
Hoffbrand AV:
Effect of ascorbic acid deficiency on serum ferritin concentrations in patients with
251.
Hussain MAM,
Flynn DM,
Green N,
Hoffbrand AV:
Effect of dose, time, and ascorbate on iron excretion after subcutaneous desferrioxamine.
Lancet
1:977,
1977[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
252.
Bothwell TH,
Bradlow BA,
Jacobs P,
Keeley K,
Kramer S,
Seftel H,
Zail S:
Iron metabolism in scurvy with special reference to erythropoiesis.
Br J Haematol
10:50,
1964
253.
Bridges KR,
Hoffman KE:
The effects of ascorbic acid on the intracellular metabolism of iron and ferritin.
J Biol Chem
261:14273,
1986
254.
Henry W:
Echocardiographic evaluation of the heart in thalassemia major.
Ann Intern Med
91:892,
1979
255.
Nienhuis AW:
Vitamin C and iron.
N Engl J Med
304:170,
1981[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
256.
McClaren CJ,
Bett JHN,
Nye JA,
Halliday JW:
Congestive cardiomyopathy and hemochromatosis
257.
Rowbotham B,
Roeser HP:
Iron overload associated with congenital pyruvate kinase deficiency and high dose ascorbic acid ingestion.
Aust NZ J Med
14:667,
1984[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
258. Olivieri NF, Brittenham GM, Armstrong SAM, Basran RK, Daneman R, Daneman N, Iwanchko RM, Talbot AL, Koren G: First prospective randomized trial of the iron chelators deferiprone and deferoxamine. Blood 86:249a, 1995 (abstr, suppl 1)
259. Piga A, Magliano M, Bianco L, Capalbo P, Baccaccini R, Gabutti V: Compliance with chelation therapy in Torino, in Sirchia G, Zanella A (eds): Thalassaemia Today: Second Mediterranean Meeting on Thalassaemia: Milano, Italy, Policlinico di Milano, 1987, p 141
260.
Zani B,
Di Palma A,
Vullo C:
Psychosocial aspects of chronic illness in adolescents with thalassaemia major.
J Adolescence
18:387,
1995
261. Borgna-Pignatti C, Cohen AR: An alternative method of subcutaneous deferoxamine administration. Blood 86:483a, 1995 (abstr, suppl 1)
262.
Hallaway PE,
Eaton JW,
Panter SS,
Hedlund BE:
Modulation of deferoxamine toxicity and clearance by covalent attachment to biocompatible polymers.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
86:10108,
1989
263.
Mahoney JR,
Hallaway PE,
Hedlund BE,
Eaton JW:
Acute iron poisoning. Rescue with macromolecular chelators.
J Clin Invest
84:1362,
1989
264. Hedlund B: Personal communication, Seattle, WA, December 1995
265. Olivieri NF, Nisbet-Brown E, Srichairatanakool S, Dragsten P, Hallaway P, Hedlund B, Porter JB: Studies of iron excretion and non-transferrin-bound plasma iron following a single infusion of hydroxyethyl starch-deferoxamine: A new approach to iron chelation therapy. Blood 88:310a, 1996 (abstr, suppl 1)
266.
Cossu P,
Toccafondi C,
Vardeu F,
Sanna G,
Frau F,
Lobrano R,
Cornacchia G,
Nucaro A,
Bertolino F,
Loi A,
DeVergillis S,
Cao A:
Iron overload and desferrioxamine chelation therapy in beta thalassemia intermedia.
Eur J Pediatr
137:267,
1981[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
267.
Pippard MJ,
Callender ST,
Warner GT,
Weatherall DJ:
Iron absorption and loading in beta-thalassaemia intermedia.
Lancet
2:819,
1979[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
268. Galanello R: Personal communication, Cagliari, Sardinia, January 1996
269.
Lucarelli G,
Galimberti M,
Polchi P,
Angelucci E,
Baronciani D,
Giardini C,
Andreani M,
Agostinelli F,
Albertini F,
Clift RA:
Marrow transplantation in patients with thalassemia responsive to iron chelation therapy.
N Engl J Med
329:840,
1993
270.
Muretto P,
Del Fiasco S,
Angelucci E,
De Rosa F,
Lucarelli G:
Bone marrow transplantation in thalassemia: Modifications of hepatic iron overload and associated lesions after long-term engrafting.
Liver
14:14,
1994[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
271.
Giardini C,
Galimberti M,
Lucarelli G,
Polchi P,
Angelucci E,
Baronciani D,
Gaziev D,
Erer B,
La Nasa G,
Barbanti I,
Muretto P:
Desferrioxamine therapy accelerates clearance of iron deposits after bone marrow transplantation for thalassaemia.
Br J Haematol
89:868,
1995[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
272.
Brittenham GM:
Pyridoxal isonicotinoyl hydrazone: Effective iron chelation after oral administration.
Ann NY Acad Sci
612:315,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
273. Porter JB, Singh S, Epemolu RO, Ackerman R, Huehns ER, Hider RC: Oral efficacy and metabolism of 1,2-diethyl-3-hydroxypyridin-4-one in thalassemia major. Blood 78:207a, 1991 (abstr, suppl 1)
274. Grady RW, Giardina PJ, Salbe AD, Hilgartner MW: A clinical trial of HBED: An orally effective iron chelator. Blood 82:359a, 1993 (abstr, suppl 1)
275. Hider RC, Kontoghiorghes GJ, Silver J: U.K. Patent: GB-2118176, 1982
276.
Kontoghiorghes GJ:
The study of iron mobilization from transferrin using
277.
Kontoghiorghes GJ:
Iron mobilization from ferritin using oxohydroxy heteroaromatic chelators.
Biochem J
233:299,
1986[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
278.
Porter JB,
Morgan J,
Hoyes KP,
Burke LC,
Huehns ER,
Hider RC:
Relative oral efficacy and acute toxicity of hydroxypyridin-4-one iron chelators in mice.
Blood
76:2389,
1990
279.
Kontoghiorghes GJ:
New orally active iron chelators.
Lancet
1:817,
1985[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
280.
Kontoghiorghes GJ,
Hoffbrand AV:
Orally active
281.
Venkataram S,
Rahman YE:
Studies of an oral iron chelator: 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one. I. Iron excretion in rats: Development of a new rapid microwave method for iron analysis in faeces.
Br J Haematol
75:274,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
282.
Hershko C,
Link G,
Pinson A,
Avramovici-Grisaru S,
Sarel S,
Peter HH,
Hider RC,
Grady RW:
New orally effective iron chelators: animal studies.
Ann NY Acad Sci
612:351,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
283.
Porter JB,
Hoyes KP,
Abeysinghe RD,
Brooks PN,
Huehns ER,
Hider RC:
Comparison of the subacute toxicity and efficacy of 3-hydroxypyridin-4-one iron chelators in iron overloaded and nonoverloaded mice.
Blood
78:2727,
1991
284.
Zevin S,
Link G,
Grady RW,
Hider RC,
Peter HH,
Hershko C:
Origin and fate of iron mobilized by the 3-hydroxypyridin-4-one oral iron chelators: Studies in hypertransfused rats by selective radioiron probes of reticuloendothelial and hepatocellular iron stores.
Blood
79:248,
1992
285.
Bergeron RJ,
Streiff RR,
Weigand J,
Luchetta G,
Creary EA,
Peter HH:
A comparison of the iron-clearing properties of 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one, 1,2-diethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one, and deferoxamine.
Blood
79:1882,
1992
286.
Olivieri NF,
Koren G,
Hermann C,
Bentur Y,
Chung D,
Klein J,
St Louis P,
Freedman MH,
McClelland RA,
Templeton DM:
Comparison of oral iron chelator L1 and desferrioxamine in iron-loaded patients.
Lancet
336:1275,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
287.
Kontoghiorghes GJ,
Aldouri MA,
Sheppard LN,
Hoffbrand AV:
1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one, an orally active chelator for treatment of iron overload.
Lancet
1:1294,
1987[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
288.
Brittenham GM:
Development of iron-chelating agents for clinical use.
Blood
80:569,
1992
289.
Collins AF,
Fassos FF,
Stobie SS,
Lewis N,
Shaw D,
Fernandes D,
Fry M,
Templeton DM,
Koren G,
Olivieri NF:
Iron balance and dose response studies of the oral iron chelator 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (L1) in iron-loaded patients with sickle cell disease.
Blood
83:2329,
1994
290.
Kontoghiorghes GJ:
Effective chelation of iron in
291.
Tondury P,
Kontoghiorghes GJ,
Ridolfi-Luthy AR,
Hirt A,
Hoffbrand AV,
Lottenbach AM,
Sonderegger T,
Wagner HP:
L1(1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one) for oral iron chelation in patients with beta-thalassaemia major.
Br J Haematol
76:550,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
292.
Agarwal MB,
Viswanathan C,
Ramanathan J,
Massil DE,
Shah S,
Supte SS,
Vasandani D,
Puniyani RR:
Oral iron chelation with L1.
Lancet
335:601,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
293.
Kontoghiorghes GJ,
Bartlett AN,
Hoffbrand AV,
Goddard JG,
Sheppard L,
Barr J,
Nortey P:
Long-term trial with the oral iron chelator 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (L1).
Br J Haematol
76:295,
1990[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
294.
Al-Refaie FN,
Wonke B,
Hoffbrand AV,
Wickens DG,
Nortey P,
Kontoghiorghes GJ:
Efficacy and possible adverse effects of the oral iron chelator 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (L1) in thalassemia major.
Blood
80:592,
1992
295.
Agarwal MB,
Gupte SS,
Viswanathan C,
Vasandani D,
Ramanathan J,
Desai N,
Puniyani RR,
Chhablani AT:
Long-term assessment of efficacy and safety of L1, an oral iron chelator, in transfusion-dependent thalassaemia: Indian trial.
Br J Haematol
82:460,
1992[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
296.
Kontoghiorghes GJ:
Design, properties, and effective use of the oral chelator L1 and other
297.
Porter JB,
Hoyes KP,
Abeysinghe R,
Huehns ER,
Hider RC:
Animal toxicology of iron chelator L1 [letter].
Lancet
2:156,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
298. Biesemeier JA, Laveglia J: 14-day oral toxicity study in dogs with 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (DMHP, L1). Food and Drug Research Laboratories, Waverly, NY, Contract No NO1-DK-4-2255, NIDDK, NIH, USA, 1991
299.
Berkoukas VA,
Bentley P,
Frost H,
Schnebli HP:
Toxicity of oral iron chelator L1 [letter].
Lancet
341:1088,
1993[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
300.
Berkovitch M,
Laxer RM,
Inman R,
Koren G,
Pritzker KP,
Fritzler MJ,
Olivieri NF:
Arthropathy in thalassemia patients receiving deferiprone.
Lancet
343:1471,
1994[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
301.
Hoffbrand AV,
Bartlett AN,
Veys PP,
O'Connor NTJ,
Kontoghiorghes GJ:
Agranulocytosis and thrombocytopenia in patient with Blackfan-Diamond anaemia during oral chelator trial [letter].
Lancet
2:457,
1989[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
302. Goudsmit R, Kersten MJ: Long term treatment of transfusion hemosiderosis with the oral chelator L1. Drugs of Today 28:133, 1992 (suppl A)
303. Agarwal MB, Gupte SS, Viswanathan C, Vasandani D, Desai N, Chablani AT: Long term efficacy and toxicity of L1-oral chelator in transfusion dependent thalassaemics over the last three years. Abstracts of the Fifth International Conference on Thalassaemias and Haemoglobinopathies, Nicosia, Cyprus, 1993, p 192
304.
al-Refaie FN,
Wonke B,
Hoffbrand AV:
Deferiprone-associated myelotoxicity.
Eur J Haematol
53:298,
1994[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
305.
Hoffbrand AV:
Oral iron chelators.
Semin Hematol
33:1,
1996[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
306.
Mehta J,
Singhal S,
Chablani A,
Revankar R,
Walvalkar A:
L1-induced systemic lupus erythematosus.
Indian J Hematol Blood Transf
9:33,
1991
307.
Mehta J,
Singhal S,
Revankar R,
Walvalkar A,
Chablani A,
Mehta BC:
Fatal systemic lupus erythematosus in patient taking oral iron chelator L1 [letter].
Lancet
337:298,
1991[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
308.
Pattanapanyasat K,
Webster HK,
Tongtawa P,
Kongcharoen P,
Hider RC:
Effect of orally active hydroxypyridinone iron chelators on human lymphocyte function.
Br J Haematol
82:431,
1992
309.
Mehta J,
Singhal S,
Mehta BC:
Deaths in patients receiving oral iron chelator L1 [letter].
Br J Haematol
85:430,
1993[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
310.
Agarwal MB,
Gupte SS,
Viswanathan C,
Vasandani D,
Ramanathan J,
Desai N,
Puniyani RR,
Chhablani AT:
Deaths in patients receiving oral iron chelator L1 [letter].
Br J Haematol
85:430,
1993
311.
al-Refaie FN,
Wonke B,
Wickens DG,
Aydinok Y,
Fielding A,
Hoffbrand A:
Zinc concentration in patients with iron overload receiving oral iron chelator 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one or desferrioxamine.
J Clin Pathol
47:657,
1994
312.
al-Refaie FN,
Hershko C,
Hoffbrand AV,
Kosaryan M,
Olivieri NF,
Tondury P,
Wonke B:
Results of long-term deferiprone (L1) therapy. A report by the International Study Group on Oral iron Chelators.
Br J Haematol
91:224,
1995[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
313. Olivieri NF for the Toronto Iron Chelation Group: Long-term followup of body iron in patients with thalassemia major during therapy with the orally active iron chelator deferiprone (L1). Blood 88:310a, 1996 (abstr, suppl 1)
314. Olivieri NF for the Toronto Iron Chelation Group: Randomized trial of deferiprone (L1) and deferoxamine in thalassemia major. Blood 88:651a, 1996 (abstr, suppl 1)
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Copyright © 1997 by American Society of Hematology Online ISSN: 1528-0020 | |||||||||