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Objectives We tested the hypothesis that intravenous iron improves exercise tolerance in anemic and nonanemic patients with symptomatic chronic heart failure (CHF) and iron deficiency. Background Anemia is common in heart failure. Iron metabolism is disturbed, and administration of iron might improve both symptoms and exercise tolerance. Methods We randomized 35 patients with CHF (age 64 ± 13 years, peak oxygen consumption pVo2 14.0 ± 2.7 ml/kg/min) to 16 weeks of intravenous iron (200 mg weekly until ferritin >500 ng/ml, 200 mg monthly thereafter) or no treatment in a 2:1 ratio. Ferritin was required to be <100 ng/ml or ferritin 100 to 300 ng/ml with transferrin saturation <20%. Patients were stratified according to hemoglobin levels (<12.5 g/dl anemic group vs. 12.5 to 14.5 g/dl nonanemic group). The observer-blinded primary end point was the change in absolute pVo2. Results The difference (95% confidence interval CI) in the mean changes from baseline to end of study between the iron and control groups was 273 (151 to 396) ng/ml for ferritin (p < 0.0001), 0.1 (−0.8 to 0.9) g/dl for hemoglobin (p = 0.9), 96 (−12 to 205) ml/min for absolute pVo2 (p = 0.08), 2.2 (0.5 to 4.0) ml/kg/min for pVo2/kg (p = 0.01), 60 (−6 to 126) s for treadmill exercise duration (p = 0.08), −0.6 (−0.9 to −0.2) for New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class (p = 0.007), and 1.7 (0.7 to 2.6) for patient global assessment (p = 0.002). In anemic patients (n = 18), the difference (95% CI) was 204 (31 to 378) ml/min for absolute pVo2 (p = 0.02), and 3.9 (1.1 to 6.8) ml/kg/min for pVO2/kg (p = 0.01). In nonanemic patients, NYHA functional class improved (p = 0.06). Adverse events were similar. Conclusions Intravenous iron loading improved exercise capacity and symptoms in patients with CHF and evidence of abnormal iron metabolism. Benefits were more evident in anemic patients. (Effect of Intravenous Ferrous Sucrose on Exercise Capacity in Chronic Heart Failure; http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct/show/NCT00125996; NCT00125996) Original language English Pages (from-to) 103-12 Number of pages 10 Journal Journal of the American College of Cardiology Volume 51 Issue number 2 DOIs https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2007.09.036 Publication status Published - 15 Jan 2008 Keywords Aged Analysis of Variance Anemia, Iron-Deficiency Chronic Disease Confidence Intervals Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Double-Blind Method Drug Administration Schedule Exercise Tolerance Female Ferric Compounds Follow-Up Studies Heart Failure Humans Infusions, Intravenous Male Middle Aged Oxygen Consumption Probability Prospective Studies Reference Values Risk Assessment Survival Rate Treatment Outcome
Okonko et al. (Tue,) studied this question.