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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2024 Mar 13.
Published in final edited form as: Br J Haematol. 2021 Nov 14;196(2):380–389. doi: 10.1111/bjh.17920

Table IV.

Transfusion and iron overload: cardiac, liver and serum iron values.

Cardiac, liver and serum iron values Age 18–39
Age ≥40
t-test P values
n Mean SD n Mean SD
Age, years 201   27·2    6·1 75   47    6
Serum ferritin, last 12 months 181 2434 2342 71 1251 1554 <0·0001
Serum ferritin by diagnosis
 Beta thalassaemia major 130 2395 2083 53 1415 1749  0·003
 Beta thalassaemia intermedia  13 2171 2580 17  740·6  510·8  0·007
 HbH-Constant Spring  13 2029 2992  1 1215    0
 Cardiac iron, MRI T2 124   24·5   13·5 48   30·4    9·2  0·001
Liver iron content
 Liver dry weight (mg iron per gram liver weight); MRI or liver biopsy* 128   10·6   10·5 46    4·5    5·7 <0·0001
 Liver wet weight (mg iron per gram liver weight): SQUID  17    4·8    7  6    1·4    0·7  0·06

MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; SD, standard deviation; SQUID, Superconducting Quantum Interfering Device.

*

Liver iron content (mg iron per gram liver dry weight) measured by MRI (n = 126) and by liver biopsy (n = 3; one liver biopsy result not available for analysis) in n = 128 younger adults and by MRI in n = 46 older adults.

Liver iron content wet weight measured by SQUID in n = 7 younger adults and n = 6 older adults.