PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

How early can myocardial iron overload occur in beta thalassemia major?

  • Gaohui Yang,
  • Rongrong Liu,
  • Peng Peng,
  • Liling Long,
  • Xinhua Zhang,
  • Weijia Yang,
  • Shaohong Tan,
  • Hongfei Pan,
  • Xingjiang Long,
  • Taigang He,
  • Lisa Anderson,
  • Yongrong Lai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085379
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. e85379

Abstract

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Myocardial siderosis is the most common cause of death in patients with beta thalassemia major(TM). This study aimed at investigating the occurrence, prevalence and severity of cardiac iron overload in a young Chinese population with beta TM.We analyzed T2* cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and serum ferritin (SF) in 201 beta TM patients. The median age was 9 years old. Patients received an average of 13 units of blood per year. The median SF level was 4536 ng/ml and 165 patients (82.1%) had SF>2500 ng/ml. Myocardial iron overload was detected in 68 patients (33.8%) and severe myocardial iron overload was detected in 26 patients (12.6%). Twenty-two patients ≤10 years old had myocardial iron overload, three of whom were only 6 years old. No myocardial iron overload was detected under the age of 6 years. Median LVEF was 64% (measured by CMR in 175 patients). Five of 6 patients with a LVEF<56% and 8 of 10 patients with cardiac disease had myocardial iron overload.The TM patients under follow-up at this regional centre in China patients are younger than other reported cohorts, more poorly-chelated, and have a high burden of iron overload. Myocardial siderosis occurred in patients younger than previously reported, and was strongly associated with impaired LVEF and cardiac disease. For such poorly-chelated TM patients, our data shows that the first assessment of cardiac T2* should be performed as early as 6 years old.