Can High-Dose Iron Pills Improve Exercise Capacity Among Heart Failure Patients?
A high-dose of oral iron supplementation among heart failure patients who have iron deficiency did not improve the exercise capacity for over 16 weeks.
The research study was published in the journal JAMA.
Iron deficiency is present in approximately 50 percent of patients with heart failure with reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (HFrEF; ejection fraction: a measure of how well the left ventricle of the heart pumps with each contraction) and is associated with reduced functional capacity, poorer quality of life, and increased mortality.
‘High-dose of oral iron supplementation did not show any improvements in exercise capacity among heart failure patients.’
Although results of intravenous iron repletion trials in iron-deficient heart failure patients have been favorable, regularly treating patients intravenously is expensive and poses logistical challenges.
The effectiveness of inexpensive, readily available oral iron supplementation in heart failure is unknown. Gregory D. Lewis, M.D., of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and colleagues randomly assigned 225 patients with HFrEF and iron deficiency to receive oral iron polysaccharide (n = 111) or placebo (n = 114), 150 mg twice daily for 16 weeks.
The researchers found that the primary measured outcome, change in peak oxygen uptake (reflects mechanisms by which iron repletion is expected to improve systemic oxygen delivery and use) from study entry to 16 weeks did not significantly differ between the two groups.
There were also no significant differences between treatment groups in changes in 6-minute walk distance.
Several limitations of the study are noted in the article, including that it was not powered to detect differences in clinical events or safety end points.
"These results do not support use of oral iron supplementation in patients with HFrEF," the authors write.
Source: Eurekalert