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2.
Am J Cardiovasc Dis ; 11(5): 555-563, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34849287

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Heart diseases due to iron overload are still the main cause of mortality in patients affected by beta-thalassemia. Detection of cardiac iron overload in pre-clinical stage allows tailoring of chelation therapy and follow-up strategies. Echocardiographic longitudinal strain analysis may be a useful tool for early detection of cardiac functional impairment iron-related. METHODS: We examined 58 patients with beta-thalassemia on regular blood transfusion and iron chelation, without overt cardiac disease who had recent Biosusceptometry SQUID to quantify liver iron concentration and cardiac assessment by CMR T2*. RESULTS: Average global longitudinal strain (GLS) was able to identify abnormal (<20 ms) cardiac T2* values with 96% specificity and negative predictive value of 92% (AUC 0.84, P=0.01). Apical 4-ch GLS may help identify early longitudinal impairment associated with severe liver iron overload with 96% specificity and negative predictive value of 92% (AUC 0.84, P=0.02). Patients with severe liver iron overload had lower average Global Longitudinal Strain values compared to other patients (P-value =0.005). CONCLUSION: GLS was a sensitive marker to detect both myocardial and liver iron overload in a population that is still free from cardiac symptoms. Thus, strain echocardiography may be a useful tool for early detection of iron overload in Beta-thalassemia.

3.
J Cardiovasc Dev Dis ; 9(1)2021 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35050213

ABSTRACT

Beta-thalassemia major (ß-TM) is a hereditary genetic disease worsened by many comorbidities due to transfusion-related iron despite chelation therapy. Since there has recently been an increase in life expectancy of patients to up to 50 years old, which influences the prevalence of these diseases and the time span for traditional cardiovascular risk factors to play their role, this study aims to evaluate their distribution and prevalence in a population of thalassemia major patients and their relationship with observed cardiovascular events and potential modifying factors. One hundred and fifty-nine ß-TM patients with at least 15 years of follow-up were included in this study. The mean age was 40.9 ± 8.4 years; 28% had diabetes mellitus and 62% had hypogonadism. The cardiovascular risk assessed using algorithms (CUORE and Pooled Cohort Risk Equation-PCRE) was low, but 3.8% of patients had at least one episode of heart failure, 35.9% showed early signs of heart failure, 22% received a diagnosis of diastolic dysfunction, and 21.4% showed supraventricular arrhythmias. Hypogonadism was shown to be related to the occurrence of cardiovascular events. The chronic accumulation of iron in the heart and the specific metabolic profile, mainly observed in patients with hypogonadism, allows us to define ß-TM as a condition with a high level of cardiovascular risk from many points of view (iron-related myopathy, atherosclerosis and arrhythmias), which requires better stratification tools and a specific follow-up program.

4.
Hemoglobin ; 42(3): 189-193, 2018 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30270686

ABSTRACT

The prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AFib) in ß-thalassemia major (ß-TM) patients has increased in the last few years, reaching up to 33.0%. Several factors may drive this value to even more in the next few years. We summarized the main challenges in the management and therapy of AFib in this very specific group of patients.


Subject(s)
Atrial Fibrillation/etiology , beta-Thalassemia/complications , Atrial Fibrillation/therapy , Disease Management , Humans , Prevalence
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