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Long-Term Effectiveness of Oral Ferric Maltol vs Intravenous Ferric Carboxymaltose for the Treatment of Iron-Deficiency Anemia in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Randomized Controlled Noninferiority Trial.
- Source :
-
Inflammatory bowel diseases [Inflamm Bowel Dis] 2022 Mar 02; Vol. 28 (3), pp. 373-384. - Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- Background: Iron-deficiency anemia is common in inflammatory bowel disease, requiring oral or intravenous iron replacement therapy. Treatment with standard oral irons is limited by poor absorption and gastrointestinal toxicity. Ferric maltol is an oral iron designed for improved absorption and tolerability.<br />Methods: In this open-label, phase 3b trial (EudraCT 2015-002496-26 and NCT02680756), adults with nonseverely active inflammatory bowel disease and iron-deficiency anemia (hemoglobin, 8.0-11.0/12.0 g/dL [women/men]; ferritin, <30 ng/mL/<100 ng/mL with transferrin saturation <20%) were randomized to oral ferric maltol 30 mg twice daily or intravenous ferric carboxymaltose given according to each center's standard practice. The primary endpoint was a hemoglobin responder rate (≥2 g/dL increase or normalization) at week 12, with a 20% noninferiority limit in the intent-to-treat and per-protocol populations.<br />Results: For the intent-to-treat (ferric maltol, n = 125/ferric carboxymaltose, n = 125) and per-protocol (n = 78/88) analyses, week 12 responder rates were 67% and 68%, respectively, for ferric maltol vs 84% and 85%, respectively, for ferric carboxymaltose. As the confidence intervals crossed the noninferiority margin, the primary endpoint was not met. Mean hemoglobin increases at weeks 12, 24, and 52 were 2.5 vs 3.0 g/dL, 2.9 vs 2.8 g/dL, and 2.7 vs 2.8 g/dL with ferric maltol vs ferric carboxymaltose. Treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 59% and 36% of patients, respectively, and resulted in treatment discontinuation in 10% and 3% of patients, respectively.<br />Conclusions: Ferric maltol achieved clinically relevant increases in hemoglobin but did not show noninferiority vs ferric carboxymaltose at week 12. Both treatments had comparable long-term effectiveness for hemoglobin and ferritin over 52 weeks and were well tolerated.<br /> (© 2021 Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation.)
- Subjects :
- Administration, Intravenous
Administration, Oral
Adult
Female
Ferric Compounds administration & dosage
Ferric Compounds adverse effects
Hemoglobins
Humans
Male
Maltose administration & dosage
Maltose adverse effects
Maltose analogs & derivatives
Pyrones administration & dosage
Pyrones adverse effects
Treatment Outcome
Anemia, Iron-Deficiency drug therapy
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases drug therapy
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1536-4844
- Volume :
- 28
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Inflammatory bowel diseases
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 33988236
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ibd/izab073