BARRY S. SKIKNE, M.D.

KANSAS CITY, KS

Research Active
Internal Medicine - Hematology NPI registered 20+ years 50 publications 1989 – 2025 NPI: 1902992647

Practice Location

3901 RAINBOW BLVD
KANSAS CITY, KS 66160

Phone: (913) 588-6000

What does BARRY SKIKNE research?

B S Skikne studies blood-related conditions, especially acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes, which are types of cancers affecting the blood and bone marrow. He examines treatments like azacitidine, both in oral and injectable forms, to assess their safety and effectiveness. By analyzing how genetic mutations and chromosomal changes impact patient survival, his research helps refine treatment approaches and improve care for patients with these serious conditions. Skikne also investigates diagnosis techniques for related anemia and the effects of stem cell transplants on long-term survival.

Key findings

  • Older acute myeloid leukemia patients with dangerous chromosomal patterns had 31–46% lower risk of death with azacitidine compared to conventional treatment.
  • Oral azacitidine (CC-486) showed response rates of 38% in low-platelet patients and 46% in higher-platelet patients, indicating safety across different platelet levels.
  • In patients receiving oral azacitidine post-stem cell transplant, relapse rates were only 13%, with one-year survival rates between 80–86%.
  • Patients with underactive bone marrow (hypocellular marrow) improved survival equally with azacitidine as those with normal marrow, ensuring consistent treatment options.
  • A combined blood test using soluble transferrin receptor and ferritin detected iron deficiency in 92% of cases, significantly improving diagnosis accuracy.

Frequently asked questions

Does Dr. Skikne study leukemia?
Yes, Dr. Skikne focuses on acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes, researching treatments and patient outcomes.
What treatments has Dr. Skikne researched?
He has researched azacitidine in various forms, including oral, and its effects on patients with leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes.
Is Dr. Skikne's work relevant to patients with low platelet counts?
Yes, his studies demonstrate that treatments like oral azacitidine are safe and effective even in patients with low platelet counts.
How does Dr. Skikne's research help in patient care?
His findings guide treatment decisions and improve diagnosis methods, ultimately enhancing patient care for those with blood disorders.
What is the significance of Dr. Skikne's findings on genetic factors?
His research identifies genetic mutations that affect survival rates, allowing doctors to tailor treatments based on individual patient profiles.

Publications in plain English

The Impact of Sponsors on Development of Clinical Research in Multiple Myeloma and AL Amyloidosis: An In-Depth Analysis.

2025

Clinical lymphoma, myeloma & leukemia

Zayad A, Ahmed N, Mahmoudjafari Z, Skikne BS, Lin T +9 more

PubMed

Chronic myeloid leukaemia, BCR-ABL1-positive, in accelerated phase with marked eosinophilia with eosinophil atypia.

2020

British journal of haematology

Richardson AI, Skikne BS, Woodroof J

PubMed

CC-486 Maintenance after Stem Cell Transplantation in Patients with Acute Myeloid Leukemia or Myelodysplastic Syndromes.

2018

Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation

de Lima M, Oran B, Champlin RE, Papadopoulos EB, Giralt SA +7 more

Plain English
This study tested oral azacitidine (CC-486) as maintenance therapy after stem cell transplant in patients with acute myeloid leukemia or myelodysplastic syndromes. Relapse rates were low — especially in patients receiving the 14-day monthly schedule (13%) — and one-year survival was around 80–86%. The treatment was well tolerated with low rates of serious graft-versus-host disease, suggesting oral maintenance after transplant may help prevent relapse.

PubMed

Extended dosing with CC-486 (oral azacitidine) in patients with myeloid malignancies.

2018

American journal of hematology

Savona MR, Kolibaba K, Conkling P, Kingsley EC, Becerra C +7 more

Plain English
This trial tested a 21-day-per-month dosing schedule of oral azacitidine (CC-486) in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes, chronic myelomonocytic leukemia, or acute myeloid leukemia. The drug produced responses in roughly a third of patients and freed some from needing blood transfusions, even in patients who had previously failed injectable treatments. The main side effects were low white blood cell counts and gastrointestinal symptoms, and the extended schedule was generally manageable.

PubMed

CC-486 (oral azacitidine) in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes with pretreatment thrombocytopenia.

2018

Leukemia research

Garcia-Manero G, Scott BL, Cogle CR, Boyd TE, Kambhampati S +6 more

Plain English
Researchers investigated whether oral azacitidine (CC-486) is safe and effective in myelodysplastic syndrome patients who already have low platelet counts. Response rates were similar regardless of starting platelet levels (38% in the low-platelet group vs. 46% in the higher-platelet group), and serious bleeding was rare. The drug was generally tolerable even in patients with the greatest bleeding risk, supporting its use across platelet count categories.

PubMed

Cytogenetics and gene mutations influence survival in older patients with acute myeloid leukemia treated with azacitidine or conventional care.

2018

Leukemia

Döhner H, Dolnik A, Tang L, Seymour JF, Minden MD +12 more

Plain English
This study examined how chromosomal abnormalities and gene mutations affect survival in older acute myeloid leukemia patients treated with azacitidine versus standard chemotherapy. Patients with the most dangerous chromosomal patterns had 31–46% lower risk of death with azacitidine compared to conventional treatment. Certain gene mutations — including FLT3 and TET2 — were linked to worse outcomes specifically in azacitidine-treated patients, pointing to areas where treatment may need to be refined.

PubMed

Bone marrow hypocellularity does not affect tolerance or efficacy of azacitidine in patients with higher-risk myelodysplastic syndromes.

2014

British journal of haematology

Seymour JF, Bennett JM, List AF, Mufti GJ, Gore SD +6 more

Plain English
This analysis asked whether patients with myelodysplastic syndromes who have an underactive bone marrow (hypocellular marrow) respond differently to azacitidine than those with normal marrow cellularity. Azacitidine improved survival in both groups equally, and side effects were similar regardless of bone marrow status. Doctors can treat patients with hypocellular marrow the same way as others with this condition.

PubMed

Mechanism of thrombocytopenia in chronic hepatitis C as evaluated by the immature platelet fraction.

2012

International journal of laboratory hematology

Zucker ML, Hagedorn CH, Murphy CA, Stanley S, Reid KJ +1 more

Plain English
This study investigated why patients with chronic hepatitis C frequently develop low platelet counts. The main driver turned out to be an enlarged spleen trapping and destroying platelets, rather than the liver producing too little of the hormone that stimulates platelet production. Understanding this mechanism is important for choosing the right treatment approach in these patients.

PubMed

Improved differential diagnosis of anemia of chronic disease and iron deficiency anemia: a prospective multicenter evaluation of soluble transferrin receptor and the sTfR/log ferritin index.

2011

American journal of hematology

Skikne BS, Punnonen K, Caldron PH, Bennett MT, Rehu M +5 more

Plain English
This multicenter trial evaluated a blood test — the soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) and a combined index (sTfR/log ferritin) — for telling apart iron deficiency anemia from anemia caused by chronic disease. Using all three markers together (ferritin, sTfR, and the index) correctly identified iron deficiency in 92% of cases, more than double the 41% detected by ferritin alone. This combination approach is particularly valuable when standard tests give ambiguous results in patients with both conditions at once.

PubMed

Giant anal condylomatosis after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation: a rare complication of human papilloma virus infection.

2008

Transplant infectious disease : an official journal of the Transplantation Society

Ganguly N, Waller S, Stasik CJ, Skikne BS, Ganguly S

Plain English
This case report describes a patient with chronic myeloid leukemia who developed a large, locally aggressive genital wart (giant condylomatosis) caused by HPV after a bone marrow transplant suppressed their immune system. Surgical removal combined with topical imiquimod cream resolved the tumor. The case highlights the need for aggressive treatment and close monitoring of HPV-related lesions in immunosuppressed transplant recipients.

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor.

2008

American journal of hematology

Skikne BS

Plain English
This review explains how measuring the serum transferrin receptor (sTfR) in blood works as a clinical tool for assessing iron status. The sTfR rises when the body is iron-deficient — unlike ferritin, it is not distorted by inflammation — and also climbs when red blood cell production is increased for any reason. Combining sTfR with ferritin allows doctors to track iron status across the full range from iron overload to severe deficiency and to distinguish iron deficiency anemia from anemia of chronic inflammation.

PubMed

Is there a plateau in the survival curve after autologous transplantation in patients with intermediate and high-risk acute myeloid leukemia? A 20-year single institution experience.

2007

Leukemia research

Ganguly S, Singh J, Divine CL, Deauna-Limayo D, Bodensteiner DC +3 more

Plain English
This 20-year single-center review asked whether autologous stem cell transplant can cure some patients with intermediate- or high-risk acute myeloid leukemia who have no matched donor. No relapses occurred after 2.2 years post-transplant, and the survival curve appeared to plateau, suggesting that a small fraction of patients may be cured. Autologous transplant appears to be a reasonable alternative when allogeneic transplant is not an option.

PubMed

A randomized, controlled Phase III trial of therapeutic plasma exchange with fresh-frozen plasma (FFP) prepared with amotosalen and ultraviolet A light compared to untreated FFP in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura.

2006

Transfusion

Mintz PD, Neff A, MacKenzie M, Goodnough LT, Hillyer C +13 more

Plain English
This Phase III trial compared plasma exchange using standard fresh-frozen plasma versus photochemically treated plasma (to inactivate potential pathogens) in patients with the life-threatening clotting disorder thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. Remission rates and time to response were nearly identical between the two treatments (82% vs. 89%). The pathogen-reduced plasma was as safe and effective as standard plasma, supporting its use as an alternative that reduces infection risk from transfusion.

PubMed

Rituximab in the treatment of relapsed thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura.

2005

Annals of hematology

Reddy PS, Deauna-Limayo D, Cook JD, Ganguly SS, Blecke C +3 more

Plain English
This report describes five patients with relapsed thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura — a dangerous clotting disorder — who were all treated with rituximab after standard plasma exchange and other therapies had failed. All five achieved complete remission within about five weeks of the first dose, and all remained in remission for 10–21 months. The findings add evidence that rituximab, which targets the immune cells making disease-causing antibodies, is an effective option for relapsed disease.

PubMed

Autologous transplantation in patients with relapsed or high-grade follicular lymphoma provides long term disease-free survival and best median duration of response.

2005

Annals of hematology

Ganguly S, Divine CL, Deauna-Limayo D, Bodensteiner DC, Cook JD +2 more

Plain English
This retrospective review examined outcomes for 24 patients with relapsed or high-grade follicular lymphoma treated with autologous stem cell transplantation. Overall survival was 71.6% and disease-free survival was 40% with a median follow-up of six years, substantially better than historical outcomes with chemotherapy alone. Transplanting patients already in complete remission produced the best results, but even patients transplanted with active disease achieved meaningful responses.

PubMed

The quantitative assessment of body iron.

2003

Blood

Cook JD, Flowers CH, Skikne BS

Plain English
This paper describes a method for calculating total body iron stores using the ratio of serum transferrin receptor to serum ferritin, producing a single number across the full spectrum from iron surplus to iron deficit. The method was validated in healthy men and women and in pregnant women, and was used to measure iron absorption in supplementation and fortification trials in Jamaica and Vietnam. Quantifying body iron this way greatly improves the ability to detect iron deficiency and measure the effectiveness of iron intervention programs.

PubMed

Fatal chemotherapy-induced encephalopathy following high-dose therapy for metastatic breast cancer: a case report and review of the literature.

2003

Bone marrow transplantation

Cossaart N, SantaCruz KS, Preston D, Johnson P, Skikne BS

Plain English
This case report describes a patient who developed a fatal brain disorder (encephalopathy) three weeks after high-dose chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation for metastatic breast cancer. Brain imaging and biopsy showed damage to deep gray matter structures, a pattern different from the white matter damage more commonly described with other chemotherapy regimens. The case raises awareness that severe brain toxicity can follow this widely used treatment protocol.

PubMed

A retrospective analysis of long-term survival in severe aplastic anemia patients treated with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation or immunosuppressive therapy with antithymocyte globulin and cyclosporin A at a single institution.

2002

Military medicine

Ellis RJ, Kahn Q, Skikne BS, Mayo MS, Allgood JW +3 more

Plain English
This retrospective study compared long-term outcomes in patients with severe aplastic anemia treated with either bone marrow transplantation or immunosuppressive therapy (antithymocyte globulin plus cyclosporin A) at a single center over more than 20 years. Survival was markedly better with immunosuppressive therapy (78% at five years) than with transplantation (33% at five years), even though the transplant group was younger. Long-term remissions are achievable with immunosuppressive therapy.

PubMed

Effects of erythropoietin therapy on iron absorption in chronic renal failure.

2000

The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine

Skikne BS, Ahluwalia N, Fergusson B, Chonko A, Cook JD

Plain English
This study measured how erythropoietin therapy affects the body's ability to absorb dietary and supplemental iron in kidney dialysis patients. Starting erythropoietin boosted absorption of both food iron and iron supplements by 2–4-fold, driven by the combined effect of increased red blood cell production and falling iron stores. Once patients reached a stable erythropoietin dose and blood counts had recovered, iron absorption returned to near-baseline levels.

PubMed

Reversible methotrexate associated lymphoproliferative disease evolving into Hodgkin's disease.

2000

The Journal of rheumatology

Moseley AC, Lindsley HB, Skikne BS, Tawfik O

Plain English
A woman taking methotrexate (a common arthritis drug) for five years developed abnormal lymph node swelling that initially shrank when the drug was stopped, but later came back and turned out to be Hodgkin's lymphoma, a type of blood cancer. This case shows that methotrexate can trigger lymph node problems that may look like they're going away but can actually transform into real cancer. Doctors need to keep monitoring patients who take this drug long-term, even if their swollen lymph nodes seem to improve, because cancer can develop silently without causing symptoms.

PubMed

Oral and parenteral glutamine in bone marrow transplantation: a randomized, double-blind study.

1999

JPEN. Journal of parenteral and enteral nutrition

Schloerb PR, Skikne BS

Plain English
This randomized, double-blind trial tested whether adding glutamine to nutrition support (oral or via IV) improves outcomes for bone marrow transplant patients. Glutamine supplementation did not significantly reduce hospital stays, infection rates, mucositis, or other common complications compared to placebo. The data suggested a possible reduction in the need for IV nutrition and a hint of improved long-term survival, but no clear benefit was established.

PubMed

Circulating transferrin receptor assay--coming of age.

1998

Clinical chemistry

Skikne BS

PubMed

An assessment of dried blood-spot technology for identifying iron deficiency.

1998

Blood

Cook JD, Flowers CH, Skikne BS

Plain English
This study tested whether iron status can be reliably measured using dried blood spots — drops of blood on filter paper, useful for large-scale field surveys. Transferrin receptor measurements worked well in dried blood spots with little interference from red blood cells, while ferritin measurements were unreliable due to contamination from hemolyzed cells. The receptor-to-ferritin ratio in dried blood spots could identify iron deficiency anemia, though it was less accurate for detecting milder deficiency without anemia.

PubMed

Markers of masked iron deficiency and effectiveness of EPO therapy in chronic renal failure.

1997

American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation

Ahluwalia N, Skikne BS, Savin V, Chonko A

Plain English
This study investigated which lab tests best predict whether kidney dialysis patients will respond to erythropoietin therapy and detect hidden iron deficiency during treatment. Serum transferrin receptor was useful for predicting a response when starting erythropoietin, but lost its reliability for detecting iron deficiency during ongoing treatment because the drug itself raises receptor levels by stimulating red cell production. Automated reticulocyte counts provided a complementary measure for monitoring response to dose increases.

PubMed

Alveolar macrophages accumulate iron and ferritin after in vivo exposure to iron or tungsten dusts.

1996

The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine

Wesselius LJ, Smirnov IM, Nelson ME, O'Brien-Ladner AR, Flowers CH +1 more

Plain English
This animal study examined whether lung immune cells (alveolar macrophages) accumulate iron after inhaling iron-rich dust or an inflammatory mineral dust. Both iron oxide and calcium tungstate dusts caused macrophages to progressively store more iron and ferritin over the weeks following exposure. These findings suggest that macrophages sequester iron in response to lung particle exposure — a process that could either limit or contribute to oxidative lung injury.

PubMed

Ferritin excretion and iron balance in humans.

1995

British journal of haematology

Skikne BS, Whittaker P, Cooke A, Cook JD

Plain English
This study examined whether iron proteins (ferritin) found in stool reflect iron absorption and overall body iron stores. Stool L-rich ferritin levels tracked closely with body iron status in healthy people and iron-deficient patients, but were unexpectedly low in hemochromatosis patients despite their iron overload. These findings help explain how the intestine handles iron and why absorption regulation fails in hemochromatosis.

PubMed

The physiological significance of circulating transferrin receptors.

1994

Advances in experimental medicine and biology

Cook JD, Baynes RD, Skikne BS

Plain English
This review describes the newly identified serum transferrin receptor — a circulating fragment of the cellular iron-uptake protein — and its potential as a clinical measurement. Blood levels of this receptor rise with tissue iron deficiency and with increased red blood cell production, and combining it with serum ferritin gives a sensitive quantitative picture of iron status. The authors anticipated it would become important for diagnosing iron deficiency anemia in both clinical practice and population studies.

PubMed

Iron deficiency: the global perspective.

1994

Advances in experimental medicine and biology

Cook JD, Skikne BS, Baynes RD

Plain English
This review describes the global scope of iron deficiency anemia, which affects over 500 million people, and outlines advances in measuring, preventing, and treating it. Beyond anemia itself, iron deficiency impairs brain development in young children, reduces work capacity in adults, and increases pregnancy complications. The review evaluates tools like the serum transferrin receptor for distinguishing true iron deficiency from other anemias, and discusses fortification strategies targeted to high-risk groups.

PubMed

Increased release of ferritin and iron by iron-loaded alveolar macrophages in cigarette smokers.

1994

American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine

Wesselius LJ, Nelson ME, Skikne BS

Plain English
This study measured how much iron and ferritin lung immune cells (alveolar macrophages) release in cigarette smokers compared to non-smokers. Heavy smokers' macrophages released iron and ferritin into the airways at rates 2–10 times higher than non-smokers, with the most iron-loaded cells releasing the greatest proportion. Released iron in lung fluid could generate cell-damaging free radicals, potentially contributing to lung injury in smokers.

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor.

1993

Annual review of medicine

Cook JD, Skikne BS, Baynes RD

Plain English
This review summarizes the clinical utility of the serum transferrin receptor, a blood test that reflects the body's demand for iron at the cellular level. Unlike ferritin, it rises with iron deficiency regardless of inflammation, and also rises when the bone marrow is producing more red blood cells than usual. Combined with ferritin measurements, it allows quantitative assessment of iron status and can replace more invasive bone marrow examination in many situations.

PubMed

The clinical significance of serum transferrin receptor levels in sickle cell disease.

1993

British journal of haematology

Singhal A, Cook JD, Skikne BS, Thomas P, Serjeant B +1 more

Plain English
This study measured serum transferrin receptor levels in children with sickle cell disease to see if it could track the severity of their expanded red blood cell production. Receptor levels were substantially higher in sickle cell patients than in those with milder sickle-hemoglobin C disease or healthy controls, and rose with age and with reticulocyte counts. The findings support using serum transferrin receptor as a non-invasive marker of erythropoietic burden in sickle cell disease.

PubMed

Serum form of the erythropoietin receptor identified by a sequence-specific peptide antibody.

1993

Blood

Baynes RD, Reddy GK, Shih YJ, Skikne BS, Cook JD

Plain English
This study searched for and found a circulating soluble form of the erythropoietin receptor — the protein that tells bone marrow to make more red blood cells — in the blood of patients with high levels of red blood cell production. The receptor fragment appeared in conditions with expanded red cell production such as sickle cell disease and thalassemia, and in patients given erythropoietin, then disappeared after marrow destruction and reappeared with engraftment. Detecting this circulating fragment offers a non-invasive way to monitor erythropoietic activity.

PubMed

Decreased fibrinolytic potential in patients with idiopathic avascular necrosis and transient osteoporosis of the hip.

1993

American journal of hematology

Van Veldhuizen PJ, Neff J, Murphey MD, Bodensteiner D, Skikne BS

Plain English
This case series examined whether abnormalities in the blood's ability to dissolve clots (fibrinolysis) are present in patients with avascular necrosis of the hip, a condition where bone tissue dies from loss of blood supply. All five patients had measurable defects in fibrinolysis, most commonly elevated levels of a clot-preservation protein (PAI-1), along with high triglycerides. The findings suggest that impaired clot breakdown may contribute to the vascular blockage that causes avascular necrosis, and that fibrinolytic testing and a lipid profile are warranted in these patients.

PubMed

Iron deficiency and the measurement of iron status.

1992

Nutrition research reviews

Cook JD, Baynes RD, Skikne BS

PubMed

Alveolar macrophage content of isoferritins and transferrin. Comparison of nonsmokers and smokers with and without chronic airflow obstruction.

1992

The American review of respiratory disease

Wesselius LJ, Flowers CH, Skikne BS

Plain English
This study measured iron, ferritin, and two ferritin subtypes in lung immune cells (alveolar macrophages) from non-smokers, smokers with normal lung function, and smokers with chronic airflow obstruction. Smokers had 6–7 times more L-ferritin in their macrophages than non-smokers, and smokers with airflow obstruction had even higher levels, while the protective H-ferritin subtype did not increase proportionally. The disproportionate accumulation of L-ferritin — which releases iron more readily — may help explain why heavy smokers are more vulnerable to oxidative lung damage.

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor distinguishes the anemia of chronic disease from iron deficiency anemia.

1992

The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine

Ferguson BJ, Skikne BS, Simpson KM, Baynes RD, Cook JD

Plain English
This study tested whether serum transferrin receptor levels can reliably separate iron deficiency anemia from anemia of chronic inflammation — a common diagnostic challenge — and from anemia in liver disease. Receptor levels were elevated only in iron deficiency and were normal in chronic inflammatory disease and most liver disease patients, unlike ferritin which is unreliable in those conditions. The serum transferrin receptor is a reliable marker of iron deficiency that is not distorted by inflammation or liver dysfunction.

PubMed

Effect of enhanced erythropoiesis on iron absorption.

1992

The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine

Skikne BS, Cook JD

Plain English
This study measured how erythropoietin injections affect iron absorption from food and supplements in healthy volunteers. Erythropoietin treatment caused a 5-fold increase in dietary nonheme iron absorption and roughly a 3-fold increase in heme iron absorption, driven by both falling iron stores and increased demand from the stimulated bone marrow. Even after accounting for the drop in iron stores, erythropoiesis itself contributed about a 2.5–3-fold boost in absorption.

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor in the megaloblastic anemia of cobalamin deficiency.

1992

European journal of haematology

Carmel R, Skikne BS

Plain English
This study examined serum transferrin receptor levels in patients with megaloblastic anemia caused by vitamin B12 deficiency, a condition where the bone marrow tries but fails to make functional red cells. Receptor levels were elevated only in the most severely anemic patients, and paradoxically rose further after B12 treatment as effective red cell production replaced the failed attempts. The pattern confirms that the receptor reflects actual functional red cell production, and its changes can help monitor recovery.

PubMed

Therapy of aplastic anemia with sequential antithymocyte globulin and cyclosporin.

1991

American journal of hematology

Doolittle GC, Bodensteiner DC, Skikne BS, Amare M

Plain English
This case series describes five patients with severe aplastic anemia treated sequentially with antithymocyte globulin first, then cyclosporin when initial treatment did not produce a response. All five patients improved: four became transfusion-independent and one had partial improvement, with responses appearing within four months of starting cyclosporin. Sequential immunosuppression appears effective for aplastic anemia and warrants further evaluation.

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor for the detection of iron deficiency in pregnancy.

1991

The American journal of clinical nutrition

Carriaga MT, Skikne BS, Finley B, Cutler B, Cook JD

Plain English
This study tested whether serum transferrin receptor measurements are useful for detecting iron deficiency during pregnancy. Receptor levels in third-trimester women were no higher than in non-pregnant women, so pregnancy itself does not elevate the test, and elevated levels reliably indicated iron depletion. Combining receptor and ferritin measurements allowed assessment of the full spectrum of iron status in pregnant women.

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor: a quantitative measure of tissue iron deficiency.

1990

Blood

Skikne BS, Flowers CH, Cook JD

Plain English
This controlled phlebotomy study in healthy volunteers established the serum transferrin receptor as a quantitative measure of iron deficiency by systematically draining iron stores through repeated blood draws. Receptor levels stayed normal while iron stores were being depleted but rose steadily once stores were exhausted and the body started pulling iron from tissues. The serum transferrin receptor proved more sensitive and reliable than other standard tests for detecting early, mild iron deficiency.

PubMed

Gastric delivery system for iron supplementation.

1990

Lancet (London, England)

Cook JD, Carriaga M, Kahn SG, Schalch W, Skikne BS

Plain English
This study evaluated a gastric delivery system (GDS) — a capsule that releases iron slowly in the stomach — as an alternative to standard iron tablets. The GDS provided three times better iron absorption than conventional ferrous sulphate, and in a double-blind trial of 200 women, the GDS produced no more gastrointestinal side effects than placebo while standard tablets caused significantly more nausea and loss of appetite. A single daily GDS capsule delivers as much absorbed iron as three conventional tablets taken throughout the day, with far fewer side effects.

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor measurements in hematologic malignancies.

1990

American journal of hematology

Klemow D, Einsphar D, Brown TA, Flowers CH, Skikne BS

Plain English
This study measured serum transferrin receptor levels across a range of blood cancers to see whether the test could reflect disease activity. Levels were significantly elevated in myeloproliferative disorders and chronic lymphocytic leukemia, where receptor levels tracked disease stage, but were normal in lymphoma, myeloma, and most other cancers. In chronic lymphocytic leukemia the test may serve as a marker of disease burden, while in other cancers it mainly reflects red blood cell production activity.

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor as an index of iron absorption.

1990

British journal of haematology

Cook JD, Dassenko S, Skikne BS

Plain English
This study examined whether serum transferrin receptor levels — which reflect the total amount of cellular iron-uptake protein in the body — predict how much iron a person absorbs from food or supplements. Receptor levels correlated far less with iron absorption than ferritin did, and the correlation disappeared entirely in people who were not iron deficient. In healthy individuals, the size of iron stores measured by ferritin is the main regulator of absorption, not the amount of transferrin receptor.

PubMed

Measuring iron-dextran in serum: is it important?

1990

Clinical chemistry

Skikne BS

PubMed

Serum transferrin receptor is a truncated form of tissue receptor.

1990

The Journal of biological chemistry

Shih YJ, Baynes RD, Hudson BG, Flowers CH, Skikne BS +1 more

Plain English
This study determined the molecular structure of the serum transferrin receptor — the circulating form of the cellular iron-uptake protein. Purification and protein sequencing showed it is a truncated fragment missing the first 100 amino acids (the parts normally anchored inside and across the cell membrane), and it circulates bound to transferrin. This structural identification confirmed the serum receptor is a genuine shed form of the tissue receptor, establishing the foundation for interpreting blood-level measurements.

PubMed

Duodenal iron proteins in idiopathic hemochromatosis.

1989

The Journal of clinical investigation

Whittaker P, Skikne BS, Covell AM, Flowers C, Cooke A +2 more

Plain English
This study examined the iron-handling proteins in the lining of the small intestine in patients with hereditary hemochromatosis compared to healthy controls. In hemochromatosis, mucosal ferritin — which normally rises with iron loading to block further absorption — failed to increase appropriately despite massive iron overload, while the iron-transport protein transferrin was significantly lower. The data point to a defect in the intestinal cell's normal iron-sensing mechanism as central to the disease, though it remains unclear whether this is cause or consequence of the abnormal absorption.

PubMed

The clinical measurement of serum transferrin receptor.

1989

The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine

Flowers CH, Skikne BS, Covell AM, Cook JD

Plain English
This study focused on a new test for measuring a protein called transferrin receptor in the blood. Researchers found that healthy individuals had an average of 5.63 mg/L of this protein, while levels dropped to about 2.58 mg/L in patients with severe blood disorders like aplastic anemia and rose to around 33.1 mg/L in those with hemolytic anemia or iron deficiency. This new testing method is much more sensitive than older techniques and helps doctors better understand and diagnose different blood conditions. Who this helps: Patients with anemia and their doctors.

PubMed

Iron deficiency: definition and diagnosis.

1989

Journal of internal medicine

Cook JD, Skikne BS

Plain English
This study focused on how to better identify and measure iron deficiency in patients. Researchers found that serum ferritin, which indicates body iron levels, is the best and most cost-effective way to screen for iron deficiency, allowing for easier diagnosis compared to more invasive tests like bone marrow examinations. Additionally, measuring the serum transferrin receptor may provide even more accurate information about tissue iron supply. Who this helps: This helps patients suffering from iron deficiency and doctors diagnosing their condition.

PubMed

Food iron absorption in idiopathic hemochromatosis.

1989

Blood

Lynch SR, Skikne BS, Cook JD

Plain English
This study measured absorption of both heme and nonheme iron from a hamburger meal in patients with hereditary hemochromatosis, their heterozygous relatives, and healthy controls. Hemochromatosis patients absorbed far more iron than predicted by their iron stores, confirming a fundamental defect in absorption control, and they were especially susceptible to loading from heme iron. Even heterozygous carriers showed a detectable absorption abnormality when the test meal contained a large, highly absorbable iron supplement.

PubMed

Frequent Co-Authors

J D Cook Barry S Skikne C H Flowers R D Baynes Delva Deauna-Limayo James D Cook Joel Hetzer David C Bodensteiner L J Wesselius John F Seymour

Physician data sourced from the NPPES NPI Registry . Publication data from PubMed . Plain-English summaries generated by AI. Not medical advice.