Journal of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology 2014-05-01

Biochemical, radiologic, ultrastructural, and genetic evaluation of iron overload in acute leukemia and iron-chelation therapy.

Lale Olcay, Tuncay Hazirolan, Yildiz Yildirmak, Esra Erdemli, Yunus Kasim Terzi, Kemal Arda, Seda Oztürkmen, Arzu Akyay, Meriç Kaymak-Cihan, Zafer Biçakçi, Ceylan Bal

Index: J. Pediatr. Hematol. Oncol. 36(4) , 281-92, (2014)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Iron overload in hereditary hemochromatosis and hematologic malignancy has unfavorable effects on morbidity. Herein, 53 children (age 108.4±58.3 mo, 25 girls and 28 boys) with acute myeloblastic and lymphoblastic leukemia, who received 4 different chemotherapy protocols, were evaluated for iron overload throughout chemotherapy. Iron overload arose: (1) before chemotherapy, which was dependent on neither chemotherapy nor packed red blood cell transfusions and (2) after chemotherapy, which was dependent on the duration and nature of chemotherapy and partially on transfusion of packed red blood cells. Iron overload was documented in 75% of patients with a ferritin level >1000 ng/mL, by liver and heart magnetic resonance imaging, and they were administered iron-chelation therapy with success. Three of 10 radiologically iron-overloaded patients were heterozygous for H63D mutation. Aminolevulinic acid and porphobilinogen levels were normal. Light microscopic examination of the bone marrow revealed increased iron granules in erythroblasts, platelets, and megakaryocytes, iron-laden macrophages, free iron in the matrix, dyshematopoiesis, and apoptotic cells. Electron microscopic examination revealed iron-laden secondary lysosomes and autolysosomes in normoblasts and iron-laden primary granules in promyelocytes, irrelevant to the ferritin level, implying autophagia due to chemotherapy as a source of the excess iron. We think that iron overload, which is an important complication of acute leukemia, should be evaluated separately from "transfusion overload," and the management principles specific to leukemia should be implemented.

Related Compounds

Structure Name/CAS No. Articles
Ferritin from Horse Spleen (100mg|1mL) Structure Ferritin from Horse Spleen (100mg|1mL)
CAS:9007-73-2
Porphobilinogen Structure Porphobilinogen
CAS:487-90-1