Long-Term Neuroradiological and Clinical Evaluation of NBIA Patients Treated with a Deferiprone Based Iron-Chelation Therapy.
NBIA
brain iron
deferiprone
iron overload
neurodegeneration
Journal
Journal of clinical medicine
ISSN: 2077-0383
Titre abrégé: J Clin Med
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101606588
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
03 Aug 2022
03 Aug 2022
Historique:
received:
30
06
2022
revised:
25
07
2022
accepted:
29
07
2022
entrez:
12
8
2022
pubmed:
13
8
2022
medline:
13
8
2022
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) comprises various rare clinical entities with brain iron overload as a common feature. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allows diagnosis of this condition, and genetic molecular testing can confirm the diagnosis to better understand the intracellular damage mechanism involved. NBIA groups disorders include: pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration (PKAN), mutations in the gene encoding pantothenate kinase 2 (PANK2); neuroferritinopathy, mutations in the calcium-independent phospholipase A2 gene (PLA2G6); aceruloplasminemia; and other subtypes with no specific clinical or MRI specific patterns identified. There is no causal therapy, and only symptom treatments are available for this condition. Promising strategies include the use of deferiprone (DFP), an orally administered bidentate iron chelator with the ability to pass through the blood-brain barrier. This is a prospective study analysis with a mean follow-up time of 5.5 ± 2.3 years (min-max: 2.4-9.6 years) to define DFP (15 mg/kg bid)'s efficacy and safety in the continuous treatment of 10 NBIA patients through clinical and neuroradiological evaluation. Our results show the progressive decrease in the cerebral accumulation of iron evaluated by MRI and a substantial stability of the overall clinical neurological picture without a significant correlation between clinical and radiological findings. Complete ferrochelation throughout the day appears to be of fundamental importance considering that oxidative damage is generated, above, all by non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI); thus, we hypothesize that a (TID) administration regimen of DFP might better apply its chelating properties over 24 h with the aim to also obtain clinical improvement beyond the neuroradiological improvement.
Identifiants
pubmed: 35956138
pii: jcm11154524
doi: 10.3390/jcm11154524
pmc: PMC9369383
pii:
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
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