Objective: Increased iron stores predispose to certain microbial infections
. This association might be especially important in patients whose immune s
ystem is impaired by HIV. This study examined the relationship between iron
stores and the survival times of patients with HIV infection.
Design: Retrospective analysis of iron stores, as determined directly in bo
ne marrow aspirates, and of hospital records.
Setting: The George Washington University Hospital, an urban academic terti
ary care institution.
Patients: Three hundred and forty-eight HIV-seropositive adults who had dia
gnostic bone marrow aspirates between January 1985 and June 1996.
Measurements: Bone marrow macrophage iron stores were graded on a scale of
0 to 5. For analysis of the influence of iron stores on survival, we compar
ed patients with grades 4-5 iron stores (markedly or massively increased; n
= 188) to those with grades 0-2 iron stores (normal or decreased; n = 130)
.
Results: Infections caused by Candida spp., Pneumocystis carinii, and Mycob
acterium spp. were more common in patients with high macrophage iron grades
than in patients with low or normal iron grades (P less than or equal to 0
.006). The adjusted estimated rate of death (hazards ratio) was higher in p
atients with high iron stores compared with patients with low or normal iro
n stores, both from the time of the bone marrow study (ratio of 2.1; 95% co
nfidence interval 1.3-3.5; P = 0.003) and the determination of HIV-seroposi
tivity (ratio of 2.8; 95% confidence interval 1.4-4.9; P = 0.001).
Conclusion: High iron stores, as determined by bone marrow macrophage iron
grade, may be associated with shorter survival times in patients with HIV i
nfection. (C) 1999 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.