Porter J B, Huehns E R
Baillieres Clin Haematol. 1989 Apr;2(2):459-74. doi: 10.1016/s0950-3536(89)80027-7.
DF has a low general toxicity, perhaps because of its low lipid solubility, Kpart 0.01 (Porter et al, 1988b). This feature of the molecule may prevent it from penetrating most cells of the body. It appears that there may be a specific mechanism of uptake of the drug by hepatocytes (Porter et al, 1987), making the iron in these cells available for excretion via the bile, while the iron excreted in the urine may all come from extracellular chelation, particularly when iron leaves the reticuloendothelial cells (Hershko et al, 1978). On this hypothesis, cellular toxicity occurs only when DF penetrates sensitive cells in sufficient amounts so that some free DF remains after all the available iron in such cells has been chelated. Such a hypothesis accounts for the protection of cells by iron overload and therefore the greater sensitivity of unloaded patients. The retina and central nervous system are further protected by the blood-retinal or blood-brain barrier, and increased penetration of this barrier, mediated by high peak levels of DF, by drugs or other diseases would lead to the retinal or neurotoxic effects seen. In the ear, high levels of unliganded DF for a period of time may be necessary to cause deafness. Thus the very property that prevents its oral activity may be part of the reason for the low toxicity of DF. The severe toxic effects on vision, hearing and growth are all more likely at higher doses of DF and there appears to be partial protection against them by iron overload. These two conclusions have to be taken into account when deciding on the appropriate dosage for each patient. With care, the dosage can be adjusted to remove enough iron to prevent iron accumulation and therefore its toxic effects, whilst keeping doses low enough to prevent DF from being toxic itself. It appears that even in very iron-overloaded patients dosages higher than 125 mg kg-1 day-1 may cause visual disturbances and should be avoided. In patients on renal dialysis with aluminium toxicity great care is needed to avoid retinal toxicity even with dosages as low as 50 mg kg-1 day-1, although the drug should not be withheld if clinically indicated. The administration of DF to renal dialysis patients is described by Pogglitsch et al (1981, 1983), Pacitti et al (1983), Ihle et al (1986) and Molitoris et al (1987). DF should not be given to patients unless there is a clearly established clinical indication.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
去铁胺的全身毒性较低,这可能是由于其脂溶性低,分配系数为0.01(波特等人,1988b)。该分子的这一特性可能使其无法穿透人体的大多数细胞。肝细胞似乎可能存在摄取该药物的特定机制(波特等人,1987),使这些细胞中的铁可通过胆汁排出,而经尿液排出的铁可能都来自细胞外螯合作用,特别是当铁离开网状内皮细胞时(赫什科等人,1978)。基于这一假设,只有当去铁胺足够量地穿透敏感细胞,以至于在这些细胞中所有可用铁被螯合后仍有一些游离的去铁胺残留时,才会发生细胞毒性。这样的假设解释了铁过载对细胞的保护作用,因此也解释了未负载铁的患者更高的敏感性。视网膜和中枢神经系统受到血 - 视网膜屏障或血 - 脑屏障的进一步保护,而去铁胺的高峰浓度、药物或其他疾病介导的该屏障通透性增加会导致所见的视网膜或神经毒性作用。在耳朵方面,可能需要一段时间高水平的未结合去铁胺才会导致耳聋。因此,阻止其口服活性的特性可能是去铁胺毒性低的部分原因。高剂量的去铁胺对视力、听力和生长的严重毒性作用更有可能出现,铁过载似乎对这些有部分保护作用。在为每位患者确定合适剂量时必须考虑这两个结论。谨慎地调整剂量,可以去除足够的铁以防止铁蓄积及其毒性作用,同时保持剂量足够低以防止去铁胺本身产生毒性。即使是铁过载非常严重的患者,高于125毫克/千克/天的剂量似乎也可能导致视觉障碍,应予以避免。对于有铝中毒的肾透析患者,即使剂量低至50毫克/千克/天,也需要格外小心以避免视网膜毒性,尽管如果有临床指征不应停用该药物。波格利奇等人(1981年、1983年)、帕西蒂等人(1983年)、伊尔等人(1986年)和莫利托里斯等人(1987年)描述了对肾透析患者使用去铁胺的情况。除非有明确确立的临床指征,否则不应给患者使用去铁胺。(摘要截取自400字)