Pretransplant and posttransplant erythroferrone levels and outcomes after heart transplantation
Hullin, R.; Pitta Gros, B.; Rocca, A.; Laptseva, N.; Martinelli, M. V.; Flammer, A. J.; Lu, H.; Meyer, P.; Leuenberger, N.; Mueller, M.
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BackgroundIron metabolism disorder is highly prevalent before and after heart transplantation (HTx). The impact of pretransplant and posttransplant iron disorder on posttransplant outcomes is unclear. ObjectivePretransplant serum levels of key regulator proteins of iron metabolism (hepcidin, interleukin-6, erythroferrone) were tested for prediction of the composite outcome 1-year posttransplant all-cause mortality (ACM) or [≥]moderate acute cellular rejection (ACR). Furthermore, serum levels of these proteins were measured at 1-year posttransplant to explore their posttransplant course and association with ACR. ResultsIn a multicenter cohort including 276 consecutive HTx recipients, patients with or without outcome (n=118/158, respectively) did not differ for pretransplant demographics, mismatch of donor/recipient sex, mismatch of HLA epitopes, and hepcidin or interleukin-6 levels. However, pretransplant erythroferrone levels were higher (1.40 vs. 1.19 ng/mL; p=0.013) and hemoglobin levels were lower (124.5 vs. 127 g/L; p=0.004) among patients with the composite outcome. Pretransplant erythroferrone levels >2.25 ng/ml (4th-quartile) were significantly associated with the composite outcome in multivariable analysis (OR 2.17; 95% CI 1.19-3.94, p=0.011; reference: 1st-3rd quartiles). In adjusted predicted proportions analysis, the incidence of the composite outcome was higher in 4th-quartile patients when compared to 1-3rd -quartiles patients (58.0 vs. 37.7%; p=0.003). At 1-year posttransplant, 80.4% of patients with pretransplant erythroferrone levels >2.25 ng/ml remained high; 88.4% of patients with pretransplant erythroferrone levels [≤]2.25 ng/ml had high levels posttransplant. In 1-year survivors with high erythroferrone levels and [≥]moderate ACR during the first postoperative year, the ratio of the opponent regulators of hepcidin gene expression, erythroferrone to interleukin-6, was higher when compared to those without ACR (1.18 vs. 0.41; p=0.016). Hepcidin levels were not different between these two subgroups indicating disproportionate ERFE increase. ConclusionHigh pretransplant erythroferrone levels predict the composite posttransplant outcome 1-year ACM and ACR. Disproportionately high posttransplant erythroferrone levels are related with [≥]moderate acute cellular rejection.
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