0521779407-09 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:12
Hemochromatosis 671
■Genotyping identifies individuals at risk for hereditary hemo-
chromatosis; 85% are C282Y/C282Y homozygotes &
■3% are C282Y/H63D compound heterozygotes
Imaging
■Ultrasound or CT scan: not diagnostic and usually normal in early
disease; may show hepatomegaly or evidence of advanced disease
(cirrhosis with splenomegaly, HCC)
Liver Biopsy
■Definitive test for determining severity of hepatic iron overload and
liver damage; consider when ferritin >1,000 mcg/L or when AST and
ALT elevated; may not need to perform in patients <30 years of age,
with normal AST and ALT, and serum ferritin < 500 mcg/L, as cirrho-
sis is unlikely
■Hepatic iron concentration (HIC) >80 mcmol per gram of dry liver
tissue associated with increased risk of hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis;
HIC >400 mcmol/g associated with increased risk of HCC and death
■Hepatic iron index (HIC divided by patient’s age in years) typically
>1.9 in patients with homozygous hereditary hemochromatosis and
expressed iron overload
differential diagnosis
■Exclude causes of secondary iron overload by history and appropri-
ate laboratory tests
■Consider other causes of chronic liver disease (e.g., hepatitis B, hep-
atitis C, alcohol)
management
What to Do First
■Assess severity of liver disease and complications
■Determine need for liver biopsy and patient’s candidacy for therapy
General Measures
■Adjust or avoid potentially hepatotoxic medications; avoid alcohol
and high doses of vitamin C
■Evaluate liver disease by history, physical examination, transferrin
saturation, ferritin, liver biochemistry±liver biopsy
■Consider HFE genotyping; if patient is homozygous for C282Y, con-
sider screening first-degree relatives