IRON REQUIREMENTS IN ERYTHROPOIETIN THERAPY.
Eschbach JW.
Best Pract Res Clin Haematol. 2005
Jun;18(2):347-61.
When erythropoietin (epoetins or darbepoetin) is used to treat
the anemias of chronic renal failure, cancer chemotherapy, inflammatory bowel
diseases, HIV infection and rheumatoid arthritis, functional iron deficiency
rapidly ensues unless individuals are iron-overloaded from prior transfusions.
Therefore, iron therapy is essential when using erythropoietin to maximize
erythropoiesis by avoiding absolute and functional iron deficiency. Body iron
stores (800-1200mg) are best maintained by providing this much iron
intravenously in a year, or more if blood loss is significant (in hemodialysis
patients this can be 1-3g). There is no ideal method for monitoring iron
therapy, but serum ferritin and transferrin iron saturation are the most common
tests. Iron deficiency is also detected by measuring the percentage of
hypochromic red blood cells, content of hemoglobin in reticulocytes, soluble
transferrin receptor levels, and free erythrocyte protoporphyrin values, but
iron overload is not monitored by these tests. Iron gluconate and iron sucrose
are the safest intravenous medications.
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