| Literature DB >> 36056175 |
Aysegül Aksan1,2, Fred Zepp3, Sangeetha Anand4, Jürgen Stein5,6.
Abstract
Iron deficiency is the primary cause of anaemia worldwide and is particularly common among children and adolescents. Intravenous (IV) iron therapy is recommended for paediatric patients with certain comorbidities or if oral iron treatment has been unsuccessful. IV ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) has recently been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for use in children aged > 1 year. This narrative review provides an overview of the available publications on the efficacy and safety of IV FCM in children and adolescents. A literature search using PubMed and Embase yielded 153 publications; 33 contained clinical data or reports on clinical experience relating to IV FCM in subjects < 18 years of age and were included in the review. No prospective, randomised controlled studies on the topic were found. Most publications were retrospective studies or case reports and included patients with various underlying conditions or patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Efficacy data were included in 27/33 publications and improvements in anaemia, and/or iron status parameters were reported in 26 of them. Safety data were included in 25/33 publications and were in line with the adverse events described in the prescribing information.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Children; Ferric carboxymaltose; Iron deficiency; Paediatrics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36056175 PMCID: PMC9439269 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-022-04582-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.860
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram summarising the literature search steps for the identification of publications on the efficacy and safety of FCM in children and adolescents aged < 18 years
Summary of publications on FCM in children or adolescents aged < 18 years
| Athiana et al. [ | Intestinal failure | < 2 years ( | Complete or partial normalisation of Hb, ferritin and MCV after 1–3 months | No AEs reported |
| Cococcioni et al. [ | IBD | 3–18 years, mean 12.5 years ( | Significant improvements in Hb (106.36 to 122.73 g/L, | Of 25 patients with low serum phosphate, two had severe hypophosphataemia, one patient had anaphylactic reaction and two patients had pruritus and fever; no AEs reported for patients < 6 years |
| Crighton et al. [ | IDA (various aetiologies) | < 14 years, median 9.3 years ( | Significant improvements in Hb and MCV ( | Three infusions associated with mild AEs and one episode of extravasation |
| Dargan et al. [ | IDA (various aetiologies) | Not reported (paediatric hospital setting) ( | Preliminary data demonstrate an increase in Hb after treatment with FCM | Not reported |
| DelRosso et al. [ | Restless legs syndrome | Mean 11.5 years for the FCM group ( | Significant improvements in ferritin (13.9 to 112.9 μg/L, | AEs reported in 17.8% of patients treated with FCM and included light-headedness and GI discomfort |
| DelRosso et al. [ | Restless sleep disorder | 5–18 years, median 13 years for FCM group ( | Significantly higher median ferritin (124.0 vs 34.0 μg/L, | One patient in the FCM group had syncope |
| Hachemi et al. [ | IBD | 7–19 years, median 16 years ( | Significant increases in median Hb (19 g/L), ferritin (117 mg/L), iron (8.5 μg/L), MCV (7.5 fL) and Ht (0.04 L/L) after 4–6 weeks | 2/40 patients developed allergic reactions with fever, shivering and vomiting |
| Hong et al. [ | IDA (various aetiologies) | < 14 years ( | Improvements in Hb (106 to 122.3 g/L), iron (6.7 to 11.7 μmol/L) and ferritin (20.2 to 85.3 μg/L) | One patient had hypotension, four had a rash and two had a fever |
| Jacobson-Kelly et al. [ | IBD | < 21 years, median 15.4 years ( | Not reported | Not reported |
| Kirk et al. [ | IDA (various aetiologies) | 2 months to 20.3 years, median 9.2 years ( | Significant improvements in mean Hb (9.4 to 11.7 g/dL, | Hypophosphataemia occurred after 44/313 (14%) infusions, in 40 patients |
| Knafelz et al. [ | IBD | 3–17 years, median 12 years ( | Improvements in median Hb (104 to 124 g/L), Ht (0.32 to 0.36 L/L), MCV (73.3 to 78.3 fL) and iron (6.7 to 13.4 μg/L) after 6 weeks | One patient developed shivering and fever |
| Laass et al. [ | GI disorders | 0–18 years, mean 11.8 years and 72 patients | Improvements in mean Hb (9.5 to 11.9 g/dL), MCV, ferritin and TSAT over 12 weeks | Two patients had mild urticaria, and one had mild oedema |
| Ozsahin et al. [ | ID/IDA (various aetiologies) | 18 months–18 years (19% < 6 years, 22% ≥ 6 and < 12 years, 59% ≥ 12 and < 18 years) ( | Of patients with complete data, 85% achieved the target ferritin level (≥ 30 μg/L) after 6–12 weeks, 83% of patients with IDA showed a complete or partial haematological response (defined as target reached for Hb, ferritin, MCV and MCH, or increment of ≥ 10 g/L in Hb from baseline at 6–12 weeks post-treatment) | 11 patients had AEs in the clinic (six had tiredness and faintness, probably due to premedication with antihistamine; one was lightly agitated due to the procedure; four had immediate events possibly associated with FCM: urticaria, nausea, headache and discomfort), and five patients reported potentially related AEs during the 96-h follow-up (one had fever, nausea and diarrhoea; one had pain in the legs and long bones, abdominal pain, fever and nausea; one had abdominal pain, pain in the long bones and headache; one had pain in the legs and long bones and abdominal pain; one had asthenia, headache, abdominal pain and pain in the legs) |
| Papadopoulos et al. [ | IBD | 3–17 years, median 14 years (all patients who received FCM were ≥ 12 years) ( | Efficacy by treatment group not reported | 2/35 patients who received FCM developed a mild rash |
| Posod et al. [ | IDA (various aetiologies) | Median 12.7 years ( | Efficacy not reported | Hypophosphataemia occurred in 8/71 FCM infusions. Potential gender effect, with girls more likely to have a decrease in plasma phosphate |
| Powers et al. [ | IDA (various aetiologies) | 9 months to 18 years, median 13.7 years ( | Of the 53 patients with follow-up tests, 52 (98%) had a complete or partial haematological response (defined as normalisation of Hb and MCV measurements and ferritin ≥ 15 ng/mL or increment of ≥ 1 g/dL in Hb above preinfusion level) | Seven patients reported minor transient AEs: one had dyspnoea, four had pruritus or urticaria, one had tingling and one had extravasation |
| Sasankan et al. [ | Gastroenterology patients | < 18 years, median 14 years (42% were < 14 years, 11.5% were < 5 years) ( | Significant improvements in median Hb (108 to 126 g/L, | One patient had skin staining, and one patient had tingling and bruising |
| Spinner et al. [ | Systolic heart failure | ≤ 18 years, median 8.1 years ( | Significant improvements in median iron (38 to 67 μg/dL, | AEs occurred after 4/55 infusions (two fever, two nausea); one patient with a recent cardiac arrest died of recurrent arrest 24 h after infusion |
| Tan et al. [ | IDA (various aetiologies) | 1–13 years, median age 10.7 years ( | Improvements in median Hb (8.9 to 12.2 g/dL), iron (3.0 to 10.6 μmol/L) and TSAT (4.5 to 17%) after a mean of 2.4 months; one patient with inflammatory enteritis and one with very early onset IBD did not show improvements in the measured parameters likely due to their underlying disease | No AEs reported |
| Carman et al. [ | IBD | 6–18 years, median 14 years ( | Patients with IDA: improvements in median Hb (111 to 132 g/L, | Two patients had itch, urticarial rash and low-grade fever |
| Valério de Azevedo et al. [ | CD | 6–18 years, median 15.5 years (all patients who received FCM were ≥ 14 years) ( | Improvements in median Hb (10.4 to 13.1 g/dL) after 4–6 weeks | One patient had minor headaches, and one patient had a fever |
| Abdelmahmuod and Yassin [ | Lymphocytopenia | 17 years ( | Anaemia and lymphocytopenia improved after therapy; Hb increased from 5.2 to 11.0 g/dL | Not reported |
| Beverina et al. [ | Extreme IDA | 13 years ( | Hb increased from 33 to 79 g/L after 12 days and to 144 g/L after about 7 months | No AEs reported |
| Daignault et al. [ | Burkitt’s lymphoma | 16 years ( | Patient was initially treated with red blood cell transfusion and oral ferrous sulphate, then received FCM 2 weeks later due to continued anaemia. However, she continued to have symptomatic anaemia and was eventually diagnosed with Burkitt’s lymphoma | Not reported |
| Harris et al. [ | CD | 17 years ( | Not reported | Two days post-infusion, a patchy, brown discolouration of the skin surrounding the initial cannula site was reported. This case represents one of three occurrences of skin staining secondary to iron extravasation recognised within the department between December 2014 and August 2016 |
| Harris et al. [ | IBD | 16–17 years ( | Case 1: Hb increased from 109 to 111–127 g/L after 1 month; case 2: Hb increased from 115 to 121–132 g/L after 8 weeks; case 3: iron 8 μmol/L and TSAT 13% pre-FCM and remained low 6 weeks after the second infusion (iron 5 μmol/L and TSAT 11%) | All three patients experienced hypophosphataemia |
| Hönemann et al. [ | Post-traumatic anaemia patient who refused blood transfusion | 17 years ( | Improvement in Hb concentration (4.2 to 11.1 g/dL after 17 days) | No AEs reported |
| Joseph et al. [ | IRIDA and at risk of hypersensitivity reactions | Adolescent (age not given) ( | A 12-step FCM desensitisation protocol resulted in tolerated FCM and corrected anaemia | Not reported |
| Pérez-Ferrer et al. [ | Cardiac surgery and factor VII deficiency, parents did not consent to blood transfusion | 5 years ( | Improvement in Hb (12.5 to 14.5 g/dL) and Ht (36.6 to 47.1%) within 12 days of erythropoietin and FCM treatment; no transfusion of blood products required | Not reported |
| Shrinkhal et al. [ | Anaemic retinopathy, megaloblastic anaemia with thrombocytopenia | 16 years ( | Changes in iron status not reported; retinal haemorrhage spontaneously resolved with clearance of fovea and the patient gained vision | Not reported |
| Crook et al. [ | IBD | 4–17 years, mean 12 years ( | Improvements in Hb (87 to 123 g/L for overall population; 83 to 115 g/L for 4–11-year-olds) and ferritin (7.5 to 137 μg/L for overall population; 6.9 to 137 μg/L for 4–11-year-olds) after 6–10 weeks; 76% had Hb level recover to within normal range | No AEs reported |
| Jones et al. [ | IDA (aetiology not reported) | 1.5–17.5 years and 33 patients | Not reported | Not reported |
| Mantadakis and Roganovic [ | IDA (various aetiologies) | 8–17.9 years, median 12 years ( | Improvements in median Hb (73 to 126 g/L) at > 4 weeks | Painless extravasation in one patient that led to mild iron staining of the forearm |
AE adverse event, CD Crohn’s disease, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, FCM ferric carboxymaltose, GI gastrointestinal, Ht haematocrit, Hb haemoglobin, IBD inflammatory bowel disease, ID iron deficiency, IDA iron deficiency anaemia, IRIDA iron-refractory iron deficiency anaemia, IV intravenous, MCH mean cell haemoglobin, MCV mean corpuscular volume, TIBC total iron binding capacity, TSAT transferrin saturation
*Some patients received FCM, but the number of patients was not reported