Monitoring of iron requirements in renal patients on erythropoietin
- PMID: 8255518
Monitoring of iron requirements in renal patients on erythropoietin
Abstract
We studied 38 patients (9 haemodialysis, 18 peritoneal dialysis, 11 advanced renal failure) over the first 12 weeks of erythropoietin therapy. In 14 iron-overloaded patients (ferritin > 500 micrograms/l the haemoglobin (+/- SEM) increased from 6.74 +/- 0.27 to 9.85 +/- 0.36 g/dl (P < 0.0001) entirely by mobilizing iron reserves (reduced from 1,220 +/- 73 to 739 +/- 111 mg, P < 0.0001). In the 24 non-overloaded patients (ferritin < 500 micrograms/l) the haemoglobin rose similarly from 7.04 +/- 0.18 to 10.70 +/- 0.36 g/dl (P < 0.0001), partly from iron reserves (depleted from 200 +/- 74 to -44 +/- 77 mg, P = 0.016) and partly from oral iron supplements (305 +/- 110 mg). In the overloaded patients the ferritin declined from 1057 micrograms/l (geometric mean, range 504-3699) to 317 micrograms/l (42-1505, P < 0.0001). In the non-overloaded patients it declined from 82 micrograms/l (8-461) to 45 micrograms/l (5-379, P = 0.016). The transferrin saturation (TS) in the overloaded patients appeared to decline from 38.3 +/- 7.2% to 24.0 +/- 3.7% but this was not statistically significant. In the non-overloaded the TS was unchanged (23.3 +/- 2.4 before and 28.1 +/- 3.6% after treatment). Considering all 38 patients together, the haemoglobin correlated negatively with the ferritin (r = 0.3731, P < 0.001) but not with the TS. The TS correlated with the serum ferritin initially (r = 0.75, P < 0.001) but not after the first 4 weeks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Comment in
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Iron deficiency during erythropoietin therapy in haemodialysis patients.Nephrol Dial Transplant. 1994;9(6):735-6. doi: 10.1093/ndt/9.6.735. Nephrol Dial Transplant. 1994. PMID: 7970108 No abstract available.
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