Critical Care Medicine: June 2016 -
Volume 44 - Issue 6 - p 1049–1058
Tacke, F et al
Objective: Because iron is both an essential and toxic
micronutrient influencing the development of microbial infections, we evaluated
the usefulness of iron parameters as outcome predictors in ICU patients.
Design: Prospective clinical single-center non-interventional study. Setting:
General internal medicine ICU; German University hospital. Patients: One
hundred and twelve septic and 43 nonseptic ICU patients, 156 healthy blood
donors. Measurements and Main Results: Serum iron parameters at admission were
correlated with short and long term mortality in ICU subjects. Both hepcidin
and ferritin concentrations were significantly elevated in ICU patients
compared with blood donors and were the highest in septic patients. On the
contrary, serum iron and transferrin levels were decreased in ICU subjects with
lowest values among septic patients. Hepcidin values correlated with ferritin
levels, and serum iron correlated strongly with transferrin saturation. A
moderate correlation of hepcidin, ferritin, and transferrin with inflammatory
parameters was noted. Both short- and long-term survivors displayed higher
ferritin/transferrin levels and lower transferrin saturation. In Kaplan-Meier
analyses, low iron levels (cutoff 10.5 μmol/mL), low transferrin saturation
(cutoff 55%), and high serum transferrin concentrations (cutoff 1.6 g/L) were
associated with short- and long-term survival. In the subgroup of septic ICU
subjects, low iron levels and transferrin saturation went along with a
nonlethal outcome. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate that parameters of
iron metabolism, particularly transferrin saturation, that reflect serum iron
availability, are strong outcome predictors in ICU patients. These data suggest
that a failure of iron homeostasis with increased iron availability in serum
occurs in lethally ill ICU patients and should trigger prospective clinical
trials evaluating the usefulness of iron-chelating therapy in critical illness
and sepsis.
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