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From the Research Institute of Public Health and the Department of Public
Health and General Practice, University of Kuopio, and the Department of
Clinical Chemistry, Kuopio University Hospital (K.P.), Finland.
Correspondence to Professor Jukka T. Salonen, Research Institute of Public Health, University of Kuopio, Harjulantie 1B, 70210 Kuopio, Finland or PO Box 1627, 70211 Kuopio, Finland. E-mail salonen{at}reivi.uku.fi
Methods and ResultsTransferrin receptor assays were carried out
for 99 men who had an AMI during an average 6.4 years of follow-up and
98 control men. Both the cases and the controls were nested from the
Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD) cohort
of 1931 men who had no clinical CHD at the baseline study. The controls
were matched for age, examination year, and residence. AMIs were
registered prospectively. Soluble transferrin receptors were measured
by immunoenzymometric assay and ferritin concentration by
radioimmunoassay from frozen baseline serum samples. The mean
TfR/ferritin ratio was 15.1 (SE, 2.0) among cases and 21.3 (SE, 2.2)
among controls (P=.035 for difference). In logistic
regression models adjusting for other strongest risk factors for AMI
and indicators of inflammation and alcohol intake, men in the lowest
and second lowest thirds of the TfR/ferritin ratio had a 2.9-fold (95%
CI, 1.3 to 6.6, P=.011) and 2.0-fold (0.9 to 4.2,
P=.081) risk of AMI compared with men in the highest
third (P=.010 for trend).
ConclusionsThese data show an association between increased body
iron stores and excess risk of AMI, confirming previous epidemiological
findings.
Because recent methodological development has allowed valid and
reliable assessment of body iron stores, we carried out a case-control
study, in a prospectively examined cohort, to test the hypothesis that
increased body iron stores are associated with an excess risk of first
AMI in men. We used the ratio of serum TfR concentration to serum
ferritin concentration, notably the best currently available
noninvasive measure of body iron stores,26 27
which has not been used previously in population studies.
Collection and Coding of AMI Data
Examination Protocol
Chemical Measurements
Serum ferritin concentrations were measured from frozen serum samples
with a radioimmunoassay (Amersham International) based on a
double-antibody technique. The interassay coefficients of variation for
serum ferritin levels of 52, 172, and 490 µg/L were 6.4%, 6.0%, and
10.9%, respectively, for 20 samples.4 No
association (P=.6982) was detected between serum ferritin
concentration and storage time. The TfR/ferritin ratio was computed as
serum TfR concentration (µg/L) divided by serum ferritin
concentration (µg/L). The correlation between TfR and ferritin
concentrations was -0.06. The TfR/ferritin ratio had a correlation of
-0.47 with serum ferritin and 0.52 with TfR level.
Lipoproteins (VLDL, LDL, and HDL) were separated from fresh serum
samples by ultracentrifugation followed by direct VLDL
removal and LDL precipitation. Cholesterol and
triglyceride concentrations were determined
enzymatically.4 HDL2 and
HDL3 subfractions were separated as previously
described.30 Plasma fibrinogen concentrations
were measured from fresh plasma samples (Coagulometer KC4, Heinrich
Amelung GmbH) on the basis of clotting of diluted plasma with excess
thrombin. Blood leukocytes were counted by the Coulter DN cell counter.
Serum
Physical Fitness
Questionnaires and Interviews
Statistical Methods
TfR/ferritin had a statistically significant crude correlation with
serum LDL cholesterol (r=-.225,
P=.002) and with the average weekly alcohol consumption
(r=-.169, P=.017). In a step-up regression
model, none of the indicators of inflammation, including blood
leukocyte count, serum copper, and serum C-reactive protein, had any
association at all with the ratio. Diabetics (mean, 6.2; n=13) had a
lower ratio than nondiabetics (mean, 19.1; n=184; P<.001
for difference).
In a multivariate logistic regression model adjusting
for other strongest risk factors for AMI and indicators of inflammation
and alcohol intake (shown in Table 2
To illustrate the magnitude of the relationship, TfR/ferritin was
divided into thirds of its distribution (<7.4, 7.4 to 18.6, >18.6)
(Figure
In addition to serum LDL and HDL cholesterol
concentrations, serum total, VLDL, HDL2, and
HDL3 cholesterol, apolipoproteins B
and A-I, total triglycerides, and apolipoprotein(a)
concentrations were also measured. None of these lipid measurements
either provided additional information in the logistic model shown in
Table 2
To test whether any extreme values had an influence on the observed
associations, we repeated the analyses after the exclusion of
such values. One subject had an extreme value in the TfR/ferritin ratio
(167). When this case was excluded, the adjusted odds ratios for the
two lowest thirds of TfR/ferritin ratio were 2.94 (P=.0098)
and 2.01 (P=.0737), P=.0090 for trend. In serum
ferritin, there were 10 markedly elevated values (
In addition, we repeated the logistic models after excluding regular
users of prostaglandin-inhibiting analgesics (eg, aspirin),
n=13, and regular users of antioxidant vitamin supplements (vitamins C
and E), n=12. The adjusted odds ratios for AMI in the two lowest thirds
of TfR/ferritin were 3.39 (P=.0088) and 2.50
(P=.0348), P=.0081 for trend.
Also, we repeated the logistic models after the exclusion of eight
subjects who were regular alcohol users, defined as weekly alcohol
consumption of
We also repeated the logistic models after either the exclusion of or
adjustment for diabetes. Among the 184 nondiabetic subjects, the
adjusted odds ratios in the two lowest TfR/ferritin thirds were 2.83
(P=.0175) and 1.78 (P=.1443), P=.0162
for trend. After adjustment for diabetes in 197 subjects, the
respective odds ratios were 2.55 (P=.0290) and 1.89
(P=.1019), P=.0260 for trend.
To study the synergism of iron stores and LDL cholesterol,
the association of TfR/ferritin ratio with the risk of AMI was
analyzed separately among men with serum LDL
cholesterol below and above the median (4.2 mmol/L).
The adjusted odds ratios in the two lowest thirds of TfR/ferritin were
4.20 (P=.0226) and 3.09 (P=.0548),
P=.0219 for trend in men with high cholesterol
and 2.43 (P=.1480) and 1.44 (P=.5093),
P=.1508 for trend in men with low
cholesterol.
When the estimated dietary intake of iron was added into the logistic
model shown in Table 2
In most other studies, the more traditional clinical measurements,
serum iron or serum transferrin saturation, have been used. Both of
these measurements are very responsive to inflammation and various
disease processes and have a large biological and analytical
variability.27 36 37 Since our original study,
the association of body iron and the risk of fatal CHD or AMI has been
studied in at least nine other prospective epidemiological studies, of
which only two have used serum ferritin as the measure of body iron and
published a full report.14 19
It is conceivable that the impact of increased body iron stores on the
risk of AMI is greater in the Finnish male population than in North
Americans. The use of antioxidative vitamin supplements and aspirin,
which is also antioxidative,38 is rare in Finland
(9% in our KIHD baseline data, n=2682), whereas almost half of
Americans have reported the use of either or
both.39 40 In addition, the mean LDL
cholesterol level among eastern Finnish men is higher
(4.04 mmol/L in KIHD) than that reported in the North American
populations.41 If iron contributes to CHD and AMI
through a pro-oxidative effect, a large proportion of antioxidant or
aspirin users in the study population would antagonize the
risk-increasing effect of high iron stores and thus attenuate the
observed association. In our present data, the association between
TfR/ferritin ratio and AMI risk was stronger among men who did not use
either antioxidative vitamins or aspirin. It would be informative to
present a separate analysis in nonusers of aspirin
and antioxidants in all epidemiological studies concerning the role of
body iron stores in CHD. Also, the synergism between iron stores and
LDL cholesterol levels should be studied.
We recently conducted another study in the KIHD cohort, in which we
analyzed the association of voluntary blood donation (loss of
iron >200 mg per donation) and AMI risk. In a
multivariate model adjusted for the main
coronary risk factors, blood donors had a relative AMI risk of
0.14 (95% CI, 0.02 to 0.97; P=.047) compared with
nondonors.15 These results provide support for
the iron-CHD hypothesis from an additional perspective. Whereas other
short-term minor changes in blood constituents take place after blood
donation, the reduction in serum ferritin concentration, indicating
loss of iron, is the most marked
consequence.42 43
Serum ferritin concentration has been by far the best noninvasively
measurable indicator of body iron stores.44 The
use of serum ferritin in assessing iron stores, however, is
complicated, because ferritin is also an acute-phase protein that may
become elevated in inflammation, in severe liver diseases, and in
cancer.37 44 The way to rule out potential
confounding by these conditions has been either the exclusion of
subjects with these conditions or the statistical adjustment for
indexes of inflammation (C-reactive protein, blood leukocyte count) and
liver damage (serum
Recently, an improved measure of body iron has been introduced, the
serum soluble TfR concentration.46 Iron delivery
to erythroblasts is mediated by the interaction of plasma transferrin
with cell surface TfRs,26 and soluble TfR
present in human serum reflects the availability of iron in the
body.26 37 46 47 Because low iron stores result
in the induction of TfR synthesis,47 the number
of TfRs on the cell surface also reflects iron
requirement.47 Several authors have suggested
that the ratio of serum concentrations of the soluble TfR and ferritin
should be a preferred measure of body iron
stores.26 27 37 According to Cook, it
"quantitatively reflects body iron over the entire spectrum of iron
balance encountered in humans."27 Because of
its noninvasiveness, the serum TfR/ferritin ratio is also very usable
in population studies.
According to our present data, this ratio is virtually independent
of inflammation. It is, however, somewhat affected by alcohol abuse.
For this reason, we carried out exhaustive statistical analyses
to examine whether the association between TfR/ferritin ratio and AMI
risk could be caused by the correlation of the ratio with alcohol
consumption. If anything, controlling for alcohol tended to strengthen
the observed association between TfR/ferritin ratio and AMI risk. This
was also the finding in analyses excluding subjects with any
inflammatory diseases, whereas either the exclusion of diabetics or an
adjustment for diabetes weakened the association slightly. This is in
accordance with the hypothesis that increased body iron stores might
predispose to noninsulin-dependent diabetes.48
If this were the case, then the statistical control for diabetes would
represent overadjustment. Also, in the present study,
diabetics had 67.5% lower TfR/ferritin ratio than nondiabetics,
supporting the role of body iron stores in a predisposition to
diabetes.
In conclusion, our present findings suggest that men with high body
iron stores (low TfR/ferritin ratio) are at a twofold to threefold
increased risk of the first AMI, confirming our original observation
that was based on serum ferritin measurement alone. In our view, the
presently available evidence speaks in favor of a role of increased
body iron stores in the development of the first myocardial infarction
in men. Randomized preventive trials concerning the effect of iron
depletion on coronary events are necessary to ultimately verify
or refute the iron-CHD hypothesis.
Received September 30, 1997;
revision received December 11, 1997;
accepted December 15, 1997.
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© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Clinical Investigation and Reports
Association Between Body Iron Stores and the Risk of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Men
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Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
BackgroundEpidemiological evidence
concerning the role of iron, a lipid peroxidation catalyst, in
coronary heart disease (CHD) is inconsistent. We
investigated the association of the concentration ratio of serum
transferrin receptor to serum ferritin (TfR/ferritin), a
state-of-the-art measurement of body iron stores, with the risk of
acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in a prospective nested case-control
study in men from eastern Finland.
Key Words: coronary disease diabetes mellitus ferritin myocardial infarction population
![]()
Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Iron is a transition
metal that can catalyze toxic redox reactions, and it has been
suggested to be involved in many harmful biological processes and
diseases in the human body.1 2 Excessive iron has
been proposed to be a potent risk factor for CHD, especially for
AMI.2 3 4 5 Supporting evidence comes from in vitro
lipid peroxidation and lipoprotein modification
studies,6 7 8 from cholesterol-fed
iron-overloaded animal models,9 10 and from
analyses of the composition of human atherosclerotic
lesions.11 12 The evidence from prospective human
population studies is inconsistent. In these, increased
estimated body iron stores have been associated with increased risk of
CHD death or AMI in some4 5 13 14 15 but not in all
studies.16 17 18 19 20 21 22 However, the discrepancy may be
largely a result of the vast biological and measurement variabilities
in methods used in assessing the body iron stores and, to some extent,
study outcomes.23 24 25 Thus, the question of
whether or not body iron is an independent risk factor for CHD and AMI
is still unanswered.
![]()
Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Subjects
The present study is a prospective nested case-control study
among participants of the KIHD, a prospective population study to
investigate previously unestablished risk factors for AMI, carotid
atherosclerosis, and other related
outcomes.28 The study protocol was approved by
the Research Ethics Committee of the University of Kuopio. The
baseline examinations were conducted during 1984 to 1989. The study
sample comprised 3235 men in eastern Finland 42, 48, 54, or 60 years
old at baseline. Of these, 198 were excluded because of death, serious
disease, or migration, and 2682 (82.9%) participated. All participants
gave a written informed consent. Men with prevalent CHD at baseline
(n=677) were excluded. Prevalent CHD was defined as either a history of
AMI or angina pectoris, positive angina pectoris on effort, or use of
nitroglycerin tablets at least weekly. Of the remaining
2005 men, data on serum ferritin and blood hemoglobin concentrations
were available for 1931 men. The cases of the present study are all
99 subjects who had a registered AMI by the end of 1992. Ninety-nine
control subjects, matched according to age, examination year, and place
of residence, were drawn from the same cohort. Of the control subjects,
one was excluded because of missing data.
The province of Kuopio participated in the multinational MONICA
project,29 in which detailed
diagnostic information on all heart attacks during 1982 to
1992 was collected prospectively. The diagnostic
classification was made by the FINMONICA investigator
group.29 The present study is based on all
heart attacks classified as definite or possible AMI or prolonged chest
pain within the KIHD cohort between March 1984 and December 1992. The
follow-up time for the 197 subjects to December 31, 1992, or death was
1.0 to 8.8 years; mean, 6.4 years. Of the 99 cases, 45 had a definite
AMI, 36 a possible AMI, 14 a prolonged chest pain, and 4
insufficient diagnostic data.
The KIHD examination protocol and measurements have been
described in detail earlier.4 28 30 31 Subjects
came to give fasting venous blood samples and hair specimens in the
morning and were instructed to abstain from ingesting alcohol for 3
days and from smoking and eating for 12 hours. Blood was drawn after a
30-minute supine rest. Hair samples were taken and blood pressure was
measured at the same visit.4 31
Serum TfR concentrations were measured from frozen serum samples
by use of the IDeA Transferrin Receptor Immunoenzymometric Assay (ORION
Diagnostica). The test is based on a noncompetitive
sandwich-type assay technique using mouse monoclonal antibodies in
immobilized and enzyme-labeled forms against the human TfR.
The interassay coefficient of variation was 4.0% to 6.1%, based on
four samples from duplicate results in 10 subsequent assays, with mean
concentrations from 1.5 to 5.5 mg/L. Serum samples for present TfR
analyses were kept frozen for 7.4 to 13 years before the
assays. Serum TfR concentration decreased over storage time
(P=.0007 for linear trend). For this reason, the examination
year was adjusted for in all statistical analyses.
-glutamyl transferase activities were measured according to
the Scandinavian recommendation.32 Serum
C-reactive protein and apolipoproteins B and A-1 concentrations were
measured with immunoturbidimetric methods (ORION
Diagnostics for C-reactive protein and KONE Oy for
apolipoproteins B and A-1). The detection limit of the method for
C-reactive protein is 10 mg/L, which was used as a cutoff value to
construct a binary variable for statistical analyses.
Apolipoprotein(a) concentration was measured by radioimmunoassay
(Mercodia). Serum copper concentrations were measured with atomic
absorption spectrometry with flame atomization. Hair mercury contents
were measured by flow injection analysis with cold vapor atomic
spectrometry and amalgamation.31
Physical fitness was estimated by maximal oxygen uptake of the
subject. The respiratory gas exchange was measured directly during a
symptom-limited exercise test. The highest average 8-second oxygen
uptake during a linear workload increase of 20 W/min was defined as the
maximal oxygen uptake.33
The number of cigarettes, cigars, and pipefuls of tobacco smoked
daily and the duration of regular smoking in years and history of
diseases were recorded on a self-administered questionnaire,
checked by an interviewer. The consumption of alcohol in the previous
12 months was assessed with a quantity-frequency method, the Nordic
Alcohol Consumption Inventory. The patterns of drinking, eg, binge
drinking, were assessed.34 The dietary intake of
nutrients, including iron, was estimated by use of Nutrica software and
4-day food recording.35 Total leisure
time energy expenditure was estimated with a modified 12-month
questionnaire.33
Differences in risk factors between cases and controls were
tested for statistical significance with Student's t test
allowing for unequal variances. Risk-factoradjusted odds ratios for
AMI were estimated by multivariate logistic regression
models. Missing values in covariates were replaced by means, separately
for cases and controls. To assess consistency of findings,
TfR/ferritin was tested both as a continuous variable and by
constructing indicator variables from the two lowest thirds of its
distribution. Tertiles were defined
a priori as cutoff points to ensure a sufficient number of
subjects in all categories. All tests of significance were two-sided.
All statistical analyses were performed with SPSS software in
an IBM RS/6000 workstation.
![]()
Results
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
The distribution of the main risk factor characteristics among the
case and control subjects are shown in Table 1
. The mean serum TfR/ferritin ratio was
28.6% (95% CI, 2.2% to 54.8%) lower among the cases than the
controls (P=.035 for difference in t test). Other
risk factors with statistically significant differences between the
cases and controls were cigarette pack-years (P=.002), serum
HDL cholesterol (P=.007), maximal oxygen uptake
(P=.001), plasma fibrinogen concentration
(P=.020), and serum copper concentration
(P=.044). Four cases and three controls had serum C-reactive
protein of
10 mg/L.
View this table:
[in a new window]
Table 1. Baseline Distributions of the Strongest Risk Factors
for AMI in the Cases (n=99) and the Controls (n=98)
), a
low TfR/ferritin ratio was significantly associated with an increased
risk of AMI (P=.0404).
View this table:
[in a new window]
Table 2. Strongest Risk Factors for AMI in a
Multivariate Logistic Model
). On average, the AMI risk was 71.2% (95% CI, 13.9% to
157.4%) higher in each lower third compared with the next
(P=.0097 for trend). Men in the lowest and second lowest
thirds of the TfR/ferritin ratio had a 2.91-fold (95% CI, 1.28 to
6.58; P=.0105) and 1.97-fold (95% CI, 0.87 to 4.22;
P=.0807) risk-factoradjusted risk of AMI, respectively,
compared with men in the highest third (Table 2
). The respective
adjusted odds ratios of definite AMI (n=45) were 3.17
(P=.0426) and 2.47 (P=.0897), P=.0405
for trend.

View larger version (38K):
[in a new window]
Figure 1. Risk-factoradjusted risk of AMI in thirds of serum
TfR/ferritin ratio and dietary iron intake. Adjusted for covariates
presented in Table 2
.
or influenced the association between TfR/ferritin and AMI
risk. The same applied to blood leukocyte count, mean systolic
blood pressure, years of hypertension, use of antihypertensive or
antidyslipidemic medications (yes versus no), measures of
obesity (body mass index in kg/m2 and
waist-to-hip circumference ratio), presence of ischemia in
exercise test, claudication, history of any
cardiovascular disease, family history of CHD, history
of any chronic inflammatory disease, calories expended in conditioning
leisure time physical activity, and alcohol abuse (binge drinking and
frequency of hangovers).
500 µg/L), 6
among the cases and 4 among the controls. After the exclusion of these,
the adjusted odds ratios of AMI for the two lowest thirds of
TfR/ferritin were 2.74 (P=.0214) and 1.97
(P=.0802), P=.0176 for trend.
500 g of absolute ethanol or serum
-glutamyltransferase of
95 IU/L. For the two lowest thirds of
TfR/ferritin, the adjusted odds ratios were 3.24 (P=.0063)
and 1.95 (P=.0915), P=.0058 for trend.
, iron intake had a statistically significant
residual association with the risk of AMI, whether the TfR/ferritin
ratio was in the model or not. For each 1 mg of iron daily, there was
an increment in the risk of AMI of 8.4% (95% CI, 1.7% to 15.5%;
P=.0136) in a model including TfR/ferritin as a continuous
variable. The risk-factoradjusted odds ratios for the two highest
thirds (>19.4 mg/d and 16.0 to 19.4 mg/d) of iron intake were 2.41
(95% CI, 1.03 to 5.63; P=.0416) and 2.40 (95% CI, 1.07 to
5.39; P=.0335), with the lowest third (<16.0 mg/d) as the
reference (Figure
). An additional adjustment for any dietary
variable (eg, intakes of energy, saturated fat, and
cholesterol) did not appreciably affect the association
between iron intake and AMI risk.
![]()
Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
High body iron was first hypothesized to be involved in CHD >15
years ago.3 Several studies have been conducted
since then to assess the association of iron and CHD or
AMI.4 5 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Results of some studies have been
in favor of iron being a risk factor; others have not. Unfortunately,
just a few studies have used the same exposure and outcome measures,
and so most of the studies are not
comparable.23 24 25 In our previous study, we
investigated whether excess body iron, estimated as serum ferritin
concentration, is associated with an increased risk of AMI (from the
prospective MONICA AMI registry) in middle-aged eastern Finnish
men.4 The results showed that men with serum
ferritin concentration
200 µg/L had a 2.2-fold (95% CI, 1.2 to
4.0; P<.01) risk-factoradjusted risk of AMI compared with
those with serum ferritin <200 µg/L.
-glutamyl transferase, serum alanine
transaminase). This problem also can be overcome to some extent by
measurement of intracellular ferritin, for example, in
erythrocytes.45
![]()
Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
AMI
=
acute myocardial infarction
CHD
=
coronary heart disease
KIHD
=
Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study
TfR
=
transferrin receptor
![]()
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by the city of Kuopio, the Academy of
Finland, and the Ministry of Education of Finland. Dr Tuomainen was
funded by the Graduate School of Public Health, University of Kuopio,
and Dr Salonen was Academy Professor of the Academy of Finland. We are
indebted to Rainer Rauramaa, MD, PhD, for the participation of the
Kuopio Research Institute of Exercise Medicine in data collection; to
Riitta Salonen, MD, PhD, Esko Taskinen, MD, and Juha M.
Venäläinen, MD, for exercise tests; to Timo Lakka, MD, PhD,
for data coding; to Marjatta Kantola, MSc, and Kari Seppänen,
MSc, for chemical analyses; to Kalevi
Pyörälä, MD, PhD, and Jaakko Tuomilehto, MD, PhD, for
the FINMONICA registry data; and to Kimmo Ronkainen, MSc, for data
analyses.
![]()
References
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
1.
Gutteridge JM, Halliwell B. Iron toxicity and
oxygen radicals. Baillieres Clin Haematol. 1989;2:195256.[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
-glutamyl-transferase in blood. Scand
J Clin Invest. 1976;36:119125.[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
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