| Literature DB >> 26373748 |
Heinz Ludwig1, Rayko Evstatiev2, Gabriela Kornek3, Matti Aapro4, Thomas Bauernhofer5, Veronika Buxhofer-Ausch6, Michael Fridrik7, Dietmar Geissler8, Klaus Geissler9, Heinz Gisslinger3, Elisabeth Koller10, Gerhard Kopetzky11, Alois Lang12, Holger Rumpold13, Michael Steurer14, Houman Kamali15, Hartmut Link16.
Abstract
Iron deficiency and iron deficiency-associated anemia are common complications in cancer patients. Most iron deficient cancer patients present with functional iron deficiency (FID), a status with adequate storage iron, but insufficient iron supply for erythroblasts and other iron dependent tissues. FID is the consequence of the cancer-associated cytokine release, while in absolute iron deficiency iron stores are depleted resulting in similar but often more severe symptoms of insufficient iron supply. Here we present a short review on the epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, clinical symptoms, and treatment of iron deficiency in cancer patients. Special emphasis is given to intravenous iron supplementation and on the benefits and limitations of different formulations. Based on these considerations and recommendations from current international guidelines we developed recommendations for clinical practice and classified the level of evidence and grade of recommendation according to the principles of evidence-based medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Functional and absolute iron deficiency; Iron deficiency; Iron supplementation; Recommendations for clinical practice; Tumor anemia
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Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26373748 PMCID: PMC4679104 DOI: 10.1007/s00508-015-0842-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wien Klin Wochenschr ISSN: 0043-5325 Impact factor: 1.704
Fig. 1Diagram of iron resorption and metabolism (with kind permission of Evstatiev R, Gasche Ch, and “Gut”)
Fig. 2Hepcidin—central regulator of iron uptake and release (with kind permission of Evstatiev R, Gasche Ch, and “Gut”)
Pathophysiology of iron deficiency. (Source: modified from [17])
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| Growth/Development |
| In women: | |
| Pregnancy/breast feeding | |
| Menstrual blood losses | |
| Chronic blood loss: | |
| Blood donation | |
| Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) | |
| Gastrointestinal neoplasms, Gastrointestinal parasites (developing countries) | |
| Angiodysplasia | |
| Decreased iron absorption: | |
| Celiac disease | |
| Helicobacter pylori infection | |
| Autoimmune atrophic gastritis | |
| Gastrectomy | |
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| Anemia of chronic disease/inflammation: |
| Infections | |
| Malignancies | |
| Chronic kidney disease | |
| Autoimmune diseases | |
| Therapy with erythrocyte-stimulating agents (ESA) | |
| Hepcidin-producing adenomas | |
| Iron-refractory iron deficiency anemia (IRIDA) | |
| Copper deficiency | |
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| Divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) mutations |
| Hypotransferrinemia | |
| Mutations in Ferroportin | |
| Aceruloplasminemia | |
| Hereditary sideroblastic anemias (ALAS 2 mutations) | |
| Heme oxygenase deficiency |
Patients with inflammatory bowel diseases often display a combined form of absolute and relative iron deficiency
Iron preparations (monopreparations) licensed in Austria. (Source: Austrian prescribing information (online, as of September 2013); for detailed information on application and contraindications, refer to the respective prescribing information)
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| Iron (Fe)(II)-Fumarate | Capsules | 100 | Ferretab® | |
| Fe(II)-Gluconate | Effervescent tablets | 100 | Loesferron® forte | |
| Fe(II)-Sulfate | Coated tablets | 105 | Ferrogradumet® | |
| Fe(II)-Sulfate | Sustained-release tablets | 80 | Tardyferon® | |
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| Fe(III)-isomaltosidea | 100 | Monofer® |
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| Fe(III)-hydroxide dextranec | 50 | Cosmofer® |
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| Fe(III)-carboxymaltosec | 50 | Ferinject® |
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| Fe(III)-hydroxide-saccharosec | 20 | Fermed® |
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| Fe(III)-hydroxide-saccharosec | 20 | Venofer® | ||
| Fe(III)-hydroxide-saccharosec | 20 | Ferrologic® | ||
aIndication: iron deficiency anemia;
bIndication: iron deficiency anemia in chronic kidney disease;
cIndication: iron deficiency
Recommendations of international societies on therapy of anemia and iron deficiency in cancer patients and national (Austrian) recommendations for the application of intravenous iron preparations
| Society | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| NCCN [ | Monotherapy with intravenous Fe in AID (ferritin < 30 ng/ml, TSAT < 20 %) indicated; no studies on iron monotherapy in FID; in patients with ferritin between 30 and 100 ng/ml and TSAT between 20 und 50 %, adequate storage iron can be assumed with the exception of patient receiving ESA which are at risk for FID. In the latter situation iron supplementation is recommended, if the expected benefit is larger than the expected risk. Iron should not be administered to patients with active infection! |
| ASH/ASCO [ | Iron monitoring recommended. Iron supplementation is recommended in case of iron deficiency, but satisfactory data for detailed recommendations for iron therapy and monitoring are not available. |
| ESMO [ | Periodic monitoring of iron homeostasis; intravenous iron induces greater increases in Hb than oral iron and reduces transfusion need. |
| EORTC [ | Administration of iron should be restricted to patients with AID or FID. |
| Austrian Consensus Group |
Oral iron should preferentially be used in non-cancer patients without inflammation (CRP normal), cancer patients in complete remission and patients without inflammatory diseases. |
| B) Intravenous iron should be administered in cancer patients with AID | |
| A) Intravenous iron should be considered in cancer patients symptomatic due to FID | |
| B) Intravenous iron and ESAs should be considered in patients with chemotherapy-induced anemia and planned or ongoing ESA therapy |
NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Network, AID absolute iron deficiency, FID functional iron deficiency
See above: a in cancer patients < 100 ng/ml, b ≥ 100 ng/ml