| Literature DB >> 34584938 |
Naser Yamani1, Aymen Ahmed2, Priyanka Gosain3, Kaneez Fatima4, Ali Tariq Shaikh4, Humera Qamar5, Izza Shahid6, Muhammad Sameer Arshad2, Talal Almas7, Vincent Figueredo8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of oral and intravenous iron supplementation in reducing the risk of mortality and hospitalizations in HF patients with iron deficiency is not well-established.Entities:
Keywords: Ferric carboxymaltose; Heart failure; Intravenous; Iron deficient; Iron sucrose; Oral
Year: 2021 PMID: 34584938 PMCID: PMC8450242 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcha.2021.100871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc ISSN: 2352-9067
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart outlining literature search.
Baseline characteristics of the included trials.
| Trial/patient characteristics | AFFIRM-AHF | CONFIRM-HF | EFFICACY-HF | FAIR-HF | FER-CARS-01 | IRON-HF | FERRIC-HF | McCullough et al | Toblli et al | Arutyunov et al |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (iron therapy/placebo) | 558/550 | 150/151 | 20/14 | 20/14 | 304/155 | 17/6 | 24/11 | 40/41 | 20/20 | 57/15 |
| Iron therapy | IV FCM | IV FCM | IV FCM | IV FCM | IV FCM | IV Iron Sucrose and Oral Ferrous Sulfate | IV Iron Sucrose | Oral Ferric Citrate | IV Iron Sucrose | IV Iron Sucrose and FCM |
| Follow-up (weeks) | 52 | 52 | 24 | 24 | 12 | 12 | 18 | 16, 12 | 24 | 14 |
| Study type | RCT | RCT | RCT | RCT (data for analysis taken from individual patient data meta-analysis by Anker et al) | RCT (data for analysis taken from individual patient data meta-analysis by Anker et al) | RCT | RCT | Individual patient data post hoc analysis of 2 trials | RCT | RCT |
| Study design | Multi-center | Multi-center | Multi-center | Multi-center | Multi-center | Multi-center | Multi-center | Multi-center | NA | NA |
| Age (years) | 71/71 | 69/70 | NA | 68/67 | NA | 66/69 | 64/62 | 65/68 | 76/74 | NA |
| Males (%) | 56/54 | 55/51 | NA | 48/45 | NA | 71/67 | 71/73 | 52/39 | NA | NA |
| NYHA Class | NA | 2.5/2.4 | NA | 2.8/2.8 | NA | NA | 2.5/2.4 | NA | 2.9/2.9 | NA |
| TSAT (%) | 15/14 | 20/18 | NA | 18/17 | NA | 19/14 | 20/21 | 20/20 | 0.2/0.2 | NA |
| NT-proBNP (pg/ml) | 4743/4684 | 2511/2600 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 256/268 | NA |
| Ischemic HF (%) | 48/47 | 83/83 | NA | 81/79 | NA | 29/67 | NA | 38/61 | NA | NA |
| LVEF (%) | 33/33 | 37/37 | NA | 32/33 | NA | 27/31 | 30/29 | NA | 31.3/30.8 | NA |
| Ferritin (μg/L) | 84/89 | 57/57 | NA | 53/60 | NA | NA | 62/88 | NA | 73/74 | NA |
| Anemia (%) | 53/57 | 53/48 | NA | 65/61 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Hemoglobin (g/dl) | 12.3/12.1 | 12.4/12.4 | NA | 11.9/11.9 | NA | 11.2/10.9 | 12.6/12.2 | 10.6/10.5 | 10.3/10.2 | NA |
| HF severity and status | Hospitalization for acute HF, LVEF < 50%, | Ambulatory, NYHA class II/III, systolic CHF with ID | Ambulatory, NYHA class II/III, systolic CHF with ID | Ambulatory, NYHA class II/III, systolic CHF with ID | Ambulatory, NYHA class II/III, systolic CHF with ID | Stable ambulatory HF patients, NHYA class II-IV, LVEF < 40%, with anemia | Symptomatic CHF with ID, NHYA class II/III, LVEF < 45% | HF patients with iron-deficiency anemia | HF patients with ID, NHYA class II-IV, LVEF < 35% | CHF patients |
| Target Hemoglobin (g/dL) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | > 12 (females), >13 (males) | NA | ≥10 increase | NA | NA |
FAIR-HF, Ferinject Assessment in Patients with Iron Deficiency and Chronic Heart Failure; CONFIRM-HF, Ferric CarboxymaltOse evaluatioN on perFormance in patients with IRon deficiency in coMbination with chronic Heart Failure; AFFIRM-AHF, A Randomised, Double-blind Placebo Controlled Trial Comparing the Effect of Intravenous Ferric Carboxymaltose on Hospitalisations and Mortality in Iron Deficient Subjects Admitted for Acute Heart Failure; FERRIC-HF, Ferric Iron Sucrose in Heart Failure; FCM, ferric carboxymaltose; HF, heart failure; CHF, chronic heart failure; NYHA, New York Heart Association; ID, iron deficiency; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; RCT, randomized controlled trial; TSAT, transferrin saturation; n, number of patients; NA, not available.
Fig. 2Forest plot comparing the effect of intravenous (p = 0.832) and oral iron (p = 0.951) supplementation on all-cause mortality when compared with placebo (p = 0.828).
Fig. 3Forest plots displaying the effect of intravenous iron on heart failure hospitalization when compared with placebo (p = 0.009).
Fig. 4Forest plot displaying the effect of intravenous iron supplementation on hospitalization when compared with placebo (p = 0.004).
Fig. 5(a) and (b) Forest plots comparing the effect on (a) time to first heart failure hospitalizations or cardiovascular death (p = 0.048) and (b) time to first cardiovascular death (p = 0.655) between intravenous FCM and control group.