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To evaluate the management, clinical outcomes and adherence to chelation therapy in adult transfusion-dependent patients with thalassaemia major.
We reviewed all transfusion-dependent adults with thalassaemia major (n = 44) attending the Haematology Department at the Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, in 2005. Data were collected retrospectively (2000–2005) and prospectively (2005) for cross-sectional clinical audit from clinical reviews, patient questionnaires, pharmacy dispensing records and routine laboratory investigations.
Iron overload and its complications; complications of transfusion; adherence to subcutaneous and oral chelation therapy (expressed as a percentage based on the ratio of the amount dispensed to the prescribed dose).
The prevalence of diabetes mellitus was 18%; hypothyroidism, 16%; hypogonadism, 32%; cardiomyopathy, 9%; and osteopenia/osteoporosis, 83%. Serological evidence of exposure to hepatitis C and hepatitis B was present in 41% and 14% of patients, respectively, and 23% of patients had active hepatitis C infection. Predictors of complications included increasing number of years of transfusion, increasing age, coprescription of desferrioxamine and deferiprone, and poor adherence to desferrioxamine treatment. There was a wide range of adherence to therapy with desferrioxamine (0–100% of prescribed dose; mean, 46%; median, 49%) and deferiprone (29%–214% of prescribed dose; mean, 117%; median 112.5%).
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©The Medical Journal of Australia 2008 www.mja.com.au PRINT ISSN: 0025-729X ONLINE ISSN: 1326-5377