4.6 Article

Comparison of Iron Dosing Strategies in Patients Undergoing Long-Term Hemodialysis: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.2215/CJN.03850321

Keywords

anemia; hemodialysis; end stage kidney disease; clinical trial; dialysis; iron; ferritins

Funding

  1. Vifor Pharma

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This study investigated whether iron supplementation in hemodialysis patients could be delivered less frequently but with higher doses compared to the current more common schedules. The results showed that administering an equal cumulative dose of ferric carboxymaltose less frequently did not meet noninferiority for maintaining hemoglobin levels compared with iron sucrose administered more frequently.
Background and objectives Whether iron supplementation in patients on hemodialysis could be delivered by less frequent but higher single doses compared with the currently more common higher-frequency schedules of lower single iron doses is unknown. Design, setting, participants, & measurements We carried out an open-label, randomized, controlled noninferiority trial over 40 weeks in patients on prevalent hemodialysis (n=142). We administered in total 2 g iron as 100 mg iron sucrose biweekly in a continuous (20???100 mg) fashion or 500 mg ferric carboxymaltose every 10 weeks in a periodic (4???500 mg) fashion. The primary end point was the change in hemoglobin at week 40 from baseline with a noninferiority margin of ?0.8 g/dl. Secondary end points were changes in ferritin, transferrin, transferrin saturation, and erythropoiesis-stimulating agent use. Results In total, 108 patients completed the study. At 40 weeks, hemoglobin changed by ?0.27 g/dl (95% confidence interval, ?0.64 to 0.09) in the iron sucrose arm and by ?0.74 g/dl (95% confidence interval, ?1.1 to ?0.39) in the ferric carboxymaltose arm compared with baseline. Noninferiority was not established in the per-protocol population as hemoglobin changes compared with baseline differed by ?0.47 g/dl (95% confidence interval, ?0.95 to 0.01) in the ferric carboxymaltose arm compared with the iron sucrose arm. Proportional changes from baseline to week 40 differed by ?31% (98.3% confidence interval, ?52 to ?0.1) for ferritin, by 1% (98.3% confidence interval, ?7 to 10) for transferrin, and by ?27% (98.3% confidence interval, ?39 to ?13) for transferrin saturation in the ferric carboxymaltose arm compared with the iron sucrose arm. Erythropoiesis-stimulating agent dosing did not differ between groups. The overall number of adverse events was similar; however, more infections were observed in the iron sucrose arm. Conclusions An equal cumulative dose of ferric carboxymaltose administered less frequently did not meet noninferiority for maintaining hemoglobin levels compared with iron sucrose administered more frequently. Clinical Trial registry name and registration number: Comparison Study of Two Iron Compounds for Treatment of Anemia in Hemodialysis Patients (COPEFER), NCT02198495

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