1. Cardiovascular Function and Treatment in β-Thalassemia Major
- Author
-
Pennell, Dj, Udelson, Je, Arai, Ae, Bozkurt, B, Cohen, Ar, Galanello, R, Hoffman, Tm, Kiernan, Ms, Lerakis, S, Piga, Antonio Giulio, Porter, Jb, Walker, Jm, Wood, J, American Heart Association Committee on Heart Failure, Transplantation of the Council on Clinical Cardiology, Council on Cardiovascular Radiology, and Imaging
- Subjects
Heart Failure ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Iron Overload ,Statement (logic) ,business.industry ,Thalassemia ,beta-Thalassemia ,Expert consensus ,American Heart Association ,Iron Chelating Agents ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Cardiac dysfunction ,Physiology (medical) ,Heart failure ,medicine ,Cardiac iron ,Humans ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,β thalassemia major - Abstract
This aim of this statement is to report an expert consensus on the diagnosis and treatment of cardiac dysfunction in β-thalassemia major (TM). This consensus statement does not cover other hemoglobinopathies, including thalassemia intermedia and sickle cell anemia, in which a different spectrum of cardiovascular complications is typical. There are considerable uncertainties in this field, with a few randomized controlled trials relating to treatment of chronic myocardial siderosis but none relating to treatment of acute heart failure. The principles of diagnosis and treatment of cardiac iron loading in TM are directly relevant to other iron-overload conditions, including in particular Diamond-Blackfan anemia, sideroblastic anemia, and hereditary hemochromatosis. Heart failure is the most common cause of death in TM and primarily results from cardiac iron accumulation. The diagnosis of ventricular dysfunction in TM patients differs from that in nonanemic patients because of the cardiovascular adaptation to chronic anemia in non–cardiac-loaded TM patients, which includes resting tachycardia, low blood pressure, enlarged end-diastolic volume, high ejection fraction, and high cardiac output. Chronic anemia also leads to background symptomatology such as dyspnea, which can mask the clinical diagnosis of cardiac dysfunction. Central to early identification of cardiac iron overload in TM is the estimation of cardiac iron by cardiac T2* magnetic resonance. Cardiac T2* Acute decompensated heart failure is a medical emergency and requires urgent consultation with a center with expertise in its management. The first principle of management of acute heart failure is control of cardiac toxicity related to free iron by urgent commencement of a continuous, uninterrupted infusion of high-dose intravenous deferoxamine, augmented by oral deferiprone. Considerable care is required to not exacerbate cardiovascular problems from overuse of diuretics or inotropes because of the unusual loading conditions in TM. The current knowledge on the efficacy of removal of cardiac iron by the 3 commercially available iron chelators is summarized for cardiac iron overload without overt cardiac dysfunction. Evidence from well-conducted randomized controlled trials shows superior efficacy of deferiprone versus deferoxamine, the superiority of combined deferiprone with deferoxamine versus deferoxamine alone, and the equivalence of deferasirox versus deferoxamine.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF