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Title: Prognostic value and clinical implication of serum ferritin levels following allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. Author: Nakamae M, Nakamae H, Koh S, Koh H, Nishimoto M, Nakashima Y, Nakane T, Hirose A, Hino M. Journal: Acta Haematol; 2015; 133(3):310-6. PubMed ID: 25471075. Abstract: Little research has been done on changes in serum ferritin (s-ferritin) levels and clinical implications following allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). We retrospectively evaluated the correlation of s-ferritin levels after HCT with survival in 203 patients. The s-ferritin level was significantly elevated, with 75% of the patients showing peak levels 90 days after HCT. The level was >10,000 ng/ml in a total of 43% of the patients, a finding that was associated with febrile neutropenia or infection. The s-ferritin level at day 30 and at 1 year after HCT was significantly associated with prognosis. However, this statistically significant relationship was lost after adjusting for acute-phase reactants. We conclude that hyperferritinemia is very common and the degree of influence of a red blood cell transfusion will vary depending on the phase after HCT. A prospective study is needed to determine if iron load in and of itself contributes to a worse prognosis after HCT.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]