Haematologica (Aug 2022)

High transferrin saturation predicts inferior clinical outcomes in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes

  • Jennifer Teichman,
  • Michelle Geddes,
  • Nancy Zhu,
  • Mary-Margaret Keating,
  • Mitchell Sabloff,
  • Grace Christou,
  • Brian Leber,
  • Dina Khalaf,
  • Eve St-Hilaire,
  • Nicholas Finn,
  • April Shamy,
  • Karen W.L. Yee,
  • John M. Storring,
  • Thomas J. Nevill,
  • Robert Delage,
  • Mohamed Elemary,
  • Versha Banerji,
  • Brett Houston,
  • Lee Mozessohn,
  • Lisa Chodirker,
  • Liying Zhang,
  • Mohammed Siddiqui,
  • Anne Parmentier,
  • Heather A. Leitch,
  • Rena J. Buckstein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2022.280723
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 108, no. 2

Abstract

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Iron overload (IO) reflected by elevated ferritin is associated with increased mortality in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), however, ferritin is an imperfect metric. Elevated labile plasma iron correlates with clinical outcomes and transferrin saturation (TSAT) >80%, but is not readily measurable. The trajectory of TSAT, and its association with clinical outcomes remain undefined. Canadian MDS registry patients were evaluated. Mean TSAT, mean ferritin and transfusion dose density (TDD) were determined. Survival was evaluated by TSAT and ferritin (80%), (≤500 μg/L, 501-800 μg/L, >800 μg/L). In 718 patients, median age was 74 years; 12%, 31%, 29%, 15% and 13% were IPSS-R very low, low, intermediate, high and very high. TSAT and ferritin were moderately correlated (r=0.63, P80% trended with inferior cardiac death-free survival (P=0.053). In univariate analysis, age, IPSS-R, blast percentage by Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status, frailty, Charlson Comorbidity Index, iron chelation (Y/N), TDD, TSAT and ferritin were significantly associated with inferior OS. By multivariable analysis, TSAT >80% (P=0.007) remained significant for OS (R2 30.3%). In MDS, TSAT >80% and ferritin >800 μg/L portended inferior OS, PFS and LFS. TSAT may indicate the presence of oxidative stress, and is readily measurable in a clinical setting. The relationship between TSAT and cardiac death-free survival warrants further study.