European journal of haematology
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
The estimation of efficacy of oral iron supplementation during treatment with epoetin beta (recombinant human erythropoietin) in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
We estimated the efficacy of oral iron therapy during treatment with rhEPO in patients undergoing cardiac surgery who were contraindicated for autologous blood donation. Seventy-six patients were enrolled in this double-blind, placebo-controlled trial and assigned to the 2 treatment groups (5x500 U/kg body weight rhEPO or placebo intravenously over 14 d before surgery). During the treatment period all patients received 300 mg Fe2+ (iron glycine sulfate) orally per day. rhEPO therapy produced significant increases in hemoglobin concentration (Hb), reticulocyte count, hematocrit (Hct) and the hypochromic red blood cells (HRBC), and a decrease in transferrin saturation (41%) compared to the placebo group before surgery. ⋯ The preoperative increases in reticulocytes, HRBC and Hb/Hct in patients with ferritin <100 mg/l or transferrin saturation <16% showed no significant difference compared to their complementary groups. The preoperative decrease in storage iron and the inverse correlation between the baseline ferritin and the preoperative change in ferritin (r=-0.94, p<0.0001) in the rhEPO group indicate that the iron requirement for hemoglobin synthesis is probably covered by the breakdown of stored iron and an increase in the rate of absorption of orally administered Fe2+. Intravenous rhEPO treatment with 5x500 U/kg body weight in combination with 300 mg oral Fe2+/d given over 14 d before surgery is a suitable regimen to increase Hb by about 1.61 g/dl and Hct by 0.06.
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Combined use of erythrocyte zinc protoporphyrin and mean corpuscular volume in differentiation of thalassemia from iron deficiency anemia.
In a retrospective study the diagnostic value of erythrocyte zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) measurement as a means of distinguishing iron deficiency anemia from thalassemia syndromes in patients with microcytosis was explored. ZPP values were increased in all patients with iron deficiency and in part of the patients with thalassemia. ⋯ The predictive value of this method is better than the results obtained by using formulae derived from red cell indices. In population screening programs for thalassemia syndromes, in which MCV determination is used as the initial test, the ZPP test is recommended as a second test, in order to discriminate between patients with microcytosis due to iron deficiency and patients with microcytosis due to thalassemia syndromes.