Hereditary hemochromatosis
From IDWiki
Definition
Recessive genetic disorder to iron handling that is characterized by elevated iron saturation and high ferritin and that causes progressive end-organ damage, most commonly liver, pancreas, and heart.
Etiology
- Most commonly caused by homozygous C282Y mutation of the HFE gene
- Only 10% of homozygotes will have iron overload
- Can also present in compound heterozygotes of HFE gene
- Non-HFE-associated iron overload
- Hemojuvelin (HJV)
- Transferrin receptor-2 (TfR2)
- Ferroportin (SLC40A1)
- Hepcidin (HAMP)
- African iron overload
Epidemiology
- Most common genetic cause of cirrhosis
- 10% of those homozygous for C282Y develop symptoms
Clinical Manifestations
History
- Asymptomatic
- Abnormal serum iron studies on routine screening chemistry panel
- Evaluation of abnormal liver tests
- Identified by family screening
- Nonspecific, systemic symptoms
- Weakness
- Fatigue
- Lethargy
- Apathy
- Weight loss
- Specific, organ-related symptoms
- Abdominal pain (hepatomegaly)
- Arthralgias (arthritis)
- Diabetes (pancreas)
- Amenorrhea (cirrhosis)
- Loss of libido, impotence (pituitary, cirrhosis)
- Congestive heart failure
- Arrhythmias
Physical exam
- Liver
- Hepatomegaly
- Cutaneous stigmata of chronic liver disease
- Splenomegaly
- Liver failure: ascites, encephalopathy, and associated features
- Joints Arthritis
- Joint swelling
- Chondrocalcinosis
- Heart
- Dilated cardiomyopathy
- Congestive heart failure
- Skin
- Increased pigmentation
- Porphyria cutanea tarda
- Endocrine
- Testicular atrophy
- Hypogonadism
- Hypothyroidism
Investigations
graph TD; invest["Serum transferrin saturation (TS) and ferritin"] tsnorm["TS <45% and normal ferritin"] tsup["TS ≥45% and/or high ferritin"] fhx["First-degree relative with HH"] noeval["No further evaluation"] genotype["HFE genotyping"] invest --> tsnorm tsnorm --> noeval invest --> tsup tsup --> genotype fhx --> genotype
- Initial workup is ferritin and serum transferrin saturation
- If ferritin is above upper limit of normal, or if transferrin saturation is ≥45%, then do HFE mutation analysis
- Transferrin saturation = serum iron concentration ÷ total iron binding capacity
- HFE mutation analysis
- Done for all first-degree relatives of an index case
- Done for all patients with elevated ferriting or TS ≥45%
- Important results:
- Homozygous C282Y
- Compound heterozygous C282Y/H63D
- Homozygous H63D/H63D generally don't have iron overload
- Iron/transferrin saturation >60% in men or >50% in women
- Most sensitive and cost-effective test
- If cirrhosis develops, monitor closely for hepatocellular carcinoma
Management
- Phlebotomy to target ferritin of 50-100
- But need to prevent hematocrit or hemoglobin dropping more than 20% of prior level
Further Reading
- Bacon BR et al. Diagnosis and management of hemochromatosis: 2011 practice guideline by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Hepatology. 2011;54(1):328-43.