Renal iron deposition by magnetic resonance imaging in pediatric β-thalassemia major patients: Relation to renal biomarkers, total body iron and chelation therapy.

Journal: European Journal Of Radiology
Published:
Abstract

Background: The reciprocal of multiecho gradient-echo (ME-GRE) T2* magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) R2*, rises linearly with tissue iron concentration in both heart and liver. Little is known about renal iron deposition in β-thalassemia major (β-TM).

Objective: To assess renal iron overload by MRI and its relation to total body iron and renal function among 50 pediatric patients with β-TM.

Methods: Serum ferritin, serum cystatin C, urinary albumin creatinine ratio (UACR), and urinary β2-microglobulin (β2 M) were measured with calculation of β2 M/albumin ratio. Quantification of liver, heart and kidney iron overload was done by MRI.

Results: Serum cystatin C, UACR and urinary β2 microglobulin as well as urinary β2m/albumin were significantly higher in β-TM patients than the control group. No significant difference was found as regards renal R2* between Patients with mean serum ferritin above 2500 μg/L and those with lower serum cutoff. Renal R2* was higher in patients with poor compliance to chelation therapy and positively correlated to indirect bilirubin, LDH, cystatin C and LIC but inversely correlated to cardiac T2*.

Conclusions: kidney iron deposition impairs renal glomerular and tubular functions in pediatric patients with β-TM and is related to hemolysis, total body iron overload and poor compliance to chelation.

Authors
Mohsen Elalfy, Nayera Khalil Elsherif, Fatma Soliman Ebeid, Eman Abdel Ismail, Khaled Ahmed, Yasser Darwish, Ahmed Ibrahim, Islam Reda Elghamry, Nermeen Shokrey, Dunia Alajeil