1. Severe infections in thalassaemic patients: prevalence and predisposing factors.
- Author
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Rahav, Galia, Volach, Vania, Shapiro, Mervyn, Rund, Deborah, Rachmilewitz, Eliezer A., and Goldfarb, Ada
- Subjects
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THALASSEMIA , *BLOOD diseases , *INFECTION , *SPLENECTOMY , *STAPHYLOCOCCUS aureus , *DEFEROXAMINE , *GLUCOSE-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency - Abstract
The incidence of infections among patients with thalassaemia and the role of risk factors for infection are uncertain. We studied the occurrence of infections necessitating hospitalisation in 92 homozygous β-thalassaemia patients who had been followed longitudinally for decades, and investigated the role of potential risk factors for these infections. Pneumonia accounted for 26% of the infections and fever of unknown origin for 14%. Staphylococcus aureus was the major pathogen possibly related to injections associated with intensive chelation with deferoxamine. There was a significant increase in the rate of infection over time, notably after 15 years. Splenectomy correlated with the incidence of infection ( P < 0·001) without being confounded by other variables and with highest frequencies of infections present after 10 years. A direct correlation between iron overload and infection was evident only before the initiation of iron-chelating treatment ( P < 0·01). Following initiation of deferoxamine, paradoxically, the infection rate increased ( P = 0·046). The combination of splenectomy and deferoxamine treatment was associated with the highest adjusted infection rate. Parathyroid dysfunction and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency were significantly associated with infection ( P = 0·02 and P = 0·04 respectively). The infection rate in thalassaemia is affected mainly by the duration of the disease and is increased by splenectomy and, in the long term, by treatment with deferoxamine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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