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Adjudication of Hospitalizations and Deaths in the IRONMAN Trial of Intravenous Iron for Heart Failure

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posted on 2025-01-07, 17:08 authored by John GF Cleland, Pierpaolo Pellicori, Fraser J Graham, Rebecca Lane, Mark C Petrie, Fozia Ahmed, Iain B Squire, Andrew Ludman, Alan Japp, Abdallah Al-Mohammad, Andrew L Clark, Ben Szwejkowski, Chris Critoph, Victor Chong, Rebekah Schiff, Thuraia Nageh, Jason Glover, John JV McMurray, Elizabeth A Thomson, Michele Robertson, Ian Ford, Philip A Kalra, Paul R Kalra
Background: Patients with heart failure and iron deficiency have diverse causes for hospitalization and death that might be affected by iron repletion. Objectives: The purpose of this study was to explore causes of hospitalizations and deaths in a randomized trial (IRONMAN) of heart failure comparing intravenous ferric derisomaltose (FDI) (n = 568) and usual care (n = 569). Methods: Patients with heart failure, left ventricular ejection fraction ≤45%, and either transferrin saturation <20% or serum ferritin <100 μg/L were enrolled. Median follow-up was 2.7 years (Q1-Q3: 1.8-3.6 years). A committee adjudicated the main and contributory causes of unplanned hospitalizations and deaths. RRs (rate ratios) for selected recurrent events with 95% CIs are also reported. Results: Compared with usual care, patients randomized to FDI had fewer unplanned hospitalizations (RR: 0.83; 95% CI: 0.71-0.97; P = 0.02), with similar reductions in cardiovascular (RR: 0.83; 95% CI: 0.69-1.01) and noncardiovascular (RR: 0.83; 95% CI: 0.67-1.03) hospitalizations, as well as hospitalizations for heart failure (RR: 0.78; 95% CI: 0.60-1.00), respiratory disease (RR: 0.70; 95% CI: 0.53-0.97), or infection (RR: 0.82; 95% CI: 0.66-1.03). Heart failure was the main cause for 26% of hospitalizations and contributed to or complicated a further 12%. Infection caused or contributed to 38% of all hospitalizations, including 27% of heart failure hospitalizations. Patterns of cardiovascular and all-cause mortality were similar for patients assigned to FDI or usual care. Conclusions: In IRONMAN, FDI exerted similar reductions in cardiovascular and noncardiovascular hospitalizations, suggesting that correcting iron deficiency might increase resistance or resilience to a broad range of problems that cause hospitalizations in patients with heart failure. (Intravenous Iron Treatment in Patients With Heart Failure and Iron Deficiency; NCT02642562)

Funding

Effectiveness of Intravenous iron treatment vs standard care in patients with heart failure and iron deficiency: a randomised, open-label multicentre trial (IRON-MAN)

British Heart Foundation

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History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of the American College of Cardiology

Volume

84

Issue

18

Pagination

1704 - 1717

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0735-1097

eissn

1558-3597

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-01-07

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Iain Squire

Deposit date

2024-11-26