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Intravenous Iron to Treat Anaemia following Critical care (INTACT): A protocol for a feasibility randomised controlled trial

Authors :
Peter A. Robbins
Ioana R Marian
Duncan Young
Vicki S Barber
Timothy S. Walsh
Simon J. Stanworth
Stuart McKechnie
David M Griffith
Akshay Shah
George Chapman
Susan J Dutton
Source :
Shah, A, Marian, I, Dutton, S J, Barber, V S, Griffith, D, McKechnie, S, Chapman, G, Robbins, P A, Young, D, Walsh, T & Stanworth, S J 2019, ' Intravenous Iron to Treat Anaemia following Critical care (INTACT): A protocol for a feasibility randomised controlled trial ', Journal of the Intensive Care Society . https://doi.org/10.1177/1751143719870080, J Intensive Care Soc
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Anaemia is common in patients who survive critical illness and is associated with high levels of fatigue and poor quality of life. In non-critically ill patients, treating anaemia with intravenous iron has resulted in meaningful improvements in quality of life, but uncertainties regarding the benefits, risks, timing and optimal route of iron therapy in survivors of critical illness remain. Methods / Design INtravenous Iron to Treat Anaemia following CriTical care (INTACT) is an open-label, feasibility, parallel group, randomised controlled trial with 1:1 randomisation to either intravenous iron (1000 mg ferric carboxymaltose) or usual medical care. The primary objective is to assess the feasibility of a future, multicentre randomised controlled trial. Participants will be followed up for up to 90 days post-randomisation. The primary outcome measures, which will be used to determine feasibility, are recruitment and randomisation rates, protocol adherence and completeness of follow-up. Secondary outcome measures include collecting clinical, laboratory, health-related quality of life and safety data to inform the power calculations of a future definitive trial. Conclusion Improving recovery from critical illness is a recognised research priority. Whether or not correcting anaemia, with intravenous iron, improves health-related quality of life and recovery requires further investigation. If so, it has the potential to become a rapidly translatable intervention. Prior to embarking on a phase III multicentre trial, a carefully designed and implemented feasibility trial is essential.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Shah, A, Marian, I, Dutton, S J, Barber, V S, Griffith, D, McKechnie, S, Chapman, G, Robbins, P A, Young, D, Walsh, T & Stanworth, S J 2019, ' Intravenous Iron to Treat Anaemia following Critical care (INTACT): A protocol for a feasibility randomised controlled trial ', Journal of the Intensive Care Society . https://doi.org/10.1177/1751143719870080, J Intensive Care Soc
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....92f32fbf041267cbf57521ec0e32b54a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1751143719870080