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HFE Genotyping in Patients with Elevated Serum Iron Indices and Liver Diseases

Authors :
Flair José Carrilho
Andreia Silva Evangelista
Marta Mitiko Deguti
T. F. Araujo
Clarice Pires Abrantes-Lemos
Eduardo Luiz Rachid Cançado
Maria Cristina Nakhle
Source :
BioMed Research International, Vol 2015 (2015), BioMed Research International
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2015.

Abstract

Iron abnormalities in chronic liver disease may be the result of genetic diseases or secondary factors. The present study aimed to identify subjects with HFE-HH in order to describe the frequency of clinical manifestations, identify risk factors for iron elevation, and compare the iron profile of HFE-HH to other genotypes in liver disease patients. A total of 108 individuals with hepatic disease, transferrin saturation (TS) > 45%, and serum ferritin (SF) > 350 ng/mL were tested for HFE mutations. Two groups were characterized: C282Y/C282Y or C282Y/H63D genotypes (n=16) were the HFE hereditary hemochromatosis (HFE-HH) group; and C282Y and H63D single heterozygotes, the H63D/H63D genotype, and wild-type were considered group 2 (n=92). Nonalcoholic liver disease, alcoholism, and chronic hepatitis C were detected more frequently in group 2, whereas arthropathy, hepatocarcinoma, diabetes, and osteoporosis rates were significantly higher in the HFE-HH group. TS > 82%, SF > 2685 ng/mL, and serum iron > 178 μg/dL were the cutoffs for diagnosis of HFE-HH in patients with liver disease. Thus, in non-Caucasian populations with chronic liver disease, HFE-HH diagnosis is more predictable in those with iron levels higher than those proposed in current guidelines for the general population.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23146141 and 23146133
Volume :
2015
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BioMed Research International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d9b26366592d2927f9bc1d0f747def04