Ajioka and Kushner1  make the point that ascertainment bias is the reason for the finding of low clinical penetrance in some studies of the incidence of hemochromatosis. They explain how they have avoided ascertainment bias in their study of hemochromatosis families by studying clinically unselected relatives homozygous for the HFE Cys282Tyr mutation and also by comparing 2 groups of probands—those presenting clinically and found to have hemochromatosis and those detected through screening of blood donors or through annual health assessment visits. For the clinical cases, the possibility of selection bias by referral to a tertiary center is acknowledged by the authors but not considered to be a source of bias. Furthermore all the “detected” probands had a transferrin saturation more than 62%. All probands were therefore selected either by disease or iron phenotype and are not representative of those in the general population who are homozygous for Cys282Tyr.

The study of 10 500 blood donors from South Wales2  referred to in the “Rebuttal to Beutler”3  was not designed to determine clinical penetrance, as blood donors must declare that they are not being treated for any medical condition before giving blood. The study was designed to determine HFE genotype frequencies and iron status within the several genotype groups. Of the 72 donors homozygous for Cys282Tyr, only 60% of males and 30% of females would have been identified if the selection was based on a transferrin saturation more than 62%. After interviewing 63 of the blood donors, a surprising finding emerged—none was aware of any family history of iron overload.

Since completion of the blood donor study, further work in South Wales has also confirmed our belief that the penetrance of the HFE gene is indeed low. A survey of hemochromatosis as a clinical condition in 2 health authorities (included in the blood donor survey region, population approximately 1 million) concluded that only 1.2% of adult Cys282Tyr homozygotes had received a confirmed diagnosis.4  Restricting the study to men older than 45 years, the figure rose to 2.8%.

Recently, we have been able to study further the families of those blood donors homozygous for Cys282Tyr. Iron status and morbidity have been compared with families of Cys282Tyr homozygotes presenting clinically (C.A.M. et al, in preparation). Despite 32% of all female Cys282Tyr+/+ relatives and 72% of all male Cys282Tyr+/+ relatives having both a raised transferrin saturation and serum ferritin, serious morbidity directly attributable to iron overload was low.

These studies, and those reviewed by Beutler5  and Ajioka and Kushner,1  all point in the same direction. Most men and about 50% of premenopausal women who are homozygous for HFE Cys282Tyr have biochemical evidence of iron accumulation (raised transferrin saturation). However, this cannot simply be equated with iron overload or morbidity and is not reflected in a significant, identifiable burden of disease for health services.

There have now been many reports of the frequency of homozygosity for Cys282Tyr in patients with diabetes, cardiac disease, liver disease, and arthritis. With the exception of hepatoma, there is no increase in frequency in such patients.6  The urgent need is to identify the factors that, in addition to homozygosity for Cys282Tyr, cause significant iron accumulation and disease. The male blood donors from South Wales had given a mean of 1 unit per year and the female donors 0.5 units. If regular blood donation at this frequency is found to prevent morbidity in Cys282Tyr homozygotes, then a universal system of disease prevention already exists.

Dr McCune has misinterpreted the significance of an elevated transferrin saturation. An elevated transferrin saturation is not biochemical evidence of iron accumulation. The serum ferritin concentration is the laboratory study that most accurately reflects an increase in liver iron stores. An elevated transferrin saturation has proved to be a remarkably reliable phenotypic marker of homozygosity for the Cys282Tyr HFE mutation. Dr McCune states that only 60% of men homozygous for the Cys282Tyr mutation were found to have an elevated transferrin saturation in her study of 10 500 blood donors from South Wales. This result differs from results in other studies in which an elevated transferrin saturation detected the predicted frequency of Cys282Tyr homozygotes in both a population of blood donors1  and in 65 000 individuals older than 20 years in a Norwegian county.2  The precise value of the transferrin saturation to be used as a “threshold” value in screening studies has been modified since our original study of blood donors. A value for the transferrin saturation of 50% for women and 55% for men is now widely accepted, recognizing that a small proportion of heterozygotes will be identified using these values.

Our previous report describing clinical penetrance of the Cys282Tyr homozygous genotype involved the study of 214 homozygous relatives of 291 homozygous probands.3  Our study differs from most published studies in that criteria for penetrance were restricted to a limited set of objective findings. Nearly every homozygote identified underwent liver biopsy, and fibrosis or cirrhosis was considered an indicator of penetrance. Many individuals with abnormal liver biopsies were completely asymptomatic. We also used radiographic evaluation of the metacarpal-phalangeal joints and found that hemochromatotic arthropathy was quite common and that the presence of arthropathy did not correlate well with total-body iron burden. We recognized the importance of familial factors influencing penetrance, and calculated our minimal estimate of the incidence of clinical penetrance to homozygous relatives of healthy probands who had been detected in screening studies. In this population, we estimated the incidence of clinical penetrance of 29% in men older than 40 years and 11% in women older than 50 years. We believe this estimate does reflect the incidence of penetrance in the white population.

Our results have been confirmed by Dr Sigvard Olsson and colleagues, who identified 297 potential homozygotes in central Sweden using an elevated transferrin saturation as the screening probe (written personal communication, June 2003). Liver biopsy was part of the evaluation, and fibrosis was found in 12.8% and cirrhosis in 5%. Thus, approximately 18% of the homozygotes identified had histologic evidence of iron-associated liver damage. These values approach the results we reported, indicating that our findings in the population of Utah are likely applicable to Cys282Tyr homozygotes elsewhere.

Defining the incidence of clinical penetrance of hemochromatosis is important in order to justify large-scale screening programs, but the key issue is that some fraction of homozygotes clearly suffer morbid complications. Until modifier genes are identified, it will be difficult to determine which homozygotes are destined to develop morbid complications and which are not. Thus, it remains important to identify homozygotes and initiate iron-depletion treatments before disease-related morbidity develops.

Correspondence: James P. Kushner, Department of Hematology, University of Utah Health Sciences Center, Salt Lake City, UT 84132; e-mail: james.kushner@hsc.utah.edu

1
Edwards CQ, Griffen LM, Goldgar D, et al. Prevalence of hemochromatosis among 11,065 presumably healthy blood donors.
N Engl J Med
.
1988
;
318
:
1355
-1362.
2
Asberg A, Hveem K, Thorstensen K, et al. Screening for hemochromatosis: high prevalence and low morbidity in an unselected population of 65,238 persons.
Scand J Gastroenterol
.
2001
;
36
:
1108
-1115.
3
Bulaj ZJ, Ajioka RS, Phillips JD, et al. Disease-related conditions in relatives of patients with hemochromatosis.
N Engl J Med
.
2000
;
343
:
1529
-1535.
1
Ajioka RS, Kushner JP. Clinical consequences of iron overload in hemochromatosis homozygotes.
Blood
.
2003
;
101
:
3351
-3353.
2
Jackson HA, Carter K, Darke C, et al. HFE mutations, iron deficiency and overload in 10 500 blood donors.
Brit J Haematol
.
2001
;
114
:
474
-484.
3
Ajioka RS, Kushner JP. Rebuttal to Beutler.
Blood
.
2003
;
101
:
3358
.
4
McCune CA, Al-Jader LN, May A, et al. Hereditary haemochromatosis: only 1% of adult HFE C282Y homozygotes in South Wales have a clinical diagnosis of iron overload.
Hum Genetics
.
2002
;
111
:
538
-543.
5
Beutler E. The HFE Cys282Tyr mutation as a necessary but not sufficient cause of clinical hereditary hemochromatosis.
Blood
.
2003
;
101
:
3347
-3350.
6
Worwood M. HFE mutations as risk factors in disease.
Best Pract Res Clin Haematol
.
2002
;
15
:
295
-314.
Sign in via your Institution