FAIR-HF: Treatment for iron deficiency improves
symptoms, functional capacity and quality of life in chronic heart failure patients
Intravenous (IV) iron treatment with ferric carboxymaltose
to reverse iron deficiency can significantly improve symptoms, exercise tolerance
and quality of life for chronic heart failure (CHF) patients, researchers said
in a late-breaking clinical trial presentation at the American Heart Association's
Scientific Sessions 2009.
"Our study shows that treating iron deficiency for 24
weeks with iron in the form of I.V. ferric carboxymaltose safely improves symptoms
in patients with chronic heart failure with anemia," said Stefan D. Anker, M.D.,
Ph.D., Professor of Cardiology and Cachexia Research, Department of Cardiology,
Charite Medical School in Berlin, Germany. Anker is lead investigator of the FAIR-HF
(FerinjectR Assessment in patients with IRon deficiency and chronic Heart Failure)
study.
Anker added, "This is the first fully successful phase
3 trial of a drug for chronic heart failure to improve symptoms in many years.
Besides symptoms, our treatment also improved functional exercise capacity as
measured by the 6-minute walking test and quality of life and it was very well
tolerated."
The researchers studied 459 heart failure patients with
iron deficiency in 75 study sites, mainly in Europe and Argentina. Researchers
randomized two-thirds of the patients to receive weekly I.V. injections of iron
until the iron deficiency was reversed, with monthly treatment thereafter. The
other one-third received a placebo (saline).
The group treated with I.V. iron showed significant improvements
in both of the study's two primary endpoints: 1) self-reported Patient Global
Assessment (PGA) score after 24 weeks (P<0.0001) and 2) a measure of CHF severity
called New York Heart Association (NYHA) class (P<0.0001). To illustrate the
results, for the PGA endpoint, 50 percent of patients assigned to ferric carboxymaltose
were either "much improved" or "moderately improved" at week 24 compared to only
28 percent of patients showing this kind of improvement in the placebo group.
For NYHA class, the study showed that 47 percent of patients assigned to ferric
carboxymaltose were in NYHA class I or II at week 24, compared to only 30 percent
of patients on placebo therapy.
The results for PGA and NYHA class were very similar
in all predefined subgroups, regardless of whether they were defined by hemoglobin
or ferritin level, age, or gender. "It is important that the benefits of I.V.
iron were observed in patients regardless of a diagnosis of anemia, suggesting
that iron deficiency itself is an important therapeutic target in heart failure
patients, independent of presence of anemia." said Anker.
Furthermore, researchers found significant improvements
in the secondary endpoints. After 24 weeks, patients receiving I.V. iron injections
undergoing the six-minute walk test were able to walk 39.1 meters further than
at baseline, compared with just 8.6 meters further in the placebo group.
From as early as week 4 of the study, and throughout
the study, I.V. iron improved quality of life assessments compared with placebo
(P<0.001). There was no significant difference in mortality or rates of adverse
events, including hospitalizations, between the treatment and placebo groups.
Sponsor: Vifor Pharma Ltd., Switzerland.
Authors are: Stefan D. Anker, M.D. Ph.D.; Piotr Ponikowski,
M.D. Ph.D.; Philip A. Poole-Wilson, M.D. (deceased); Josep Comin Colet, M.D.;
Gerasimos Filipatos, M.D.; Ronnie Willenheimer, M.D.; Kenneth Dickstein, M.D.
Ph.D.; Helmut Drexler (deceased), M.D.; and Thomas Luscher, M.D.; Stuart Pocock,
Ph.D.; Claudio Mori, M.D.; Barbara von Eisenhart Rothe, M.D.
Disclosures: Stefan D. Anker is a member of the Executive
Committee of FAIR-HF and a consultant to Vifor Pharma Ltd. and Amgen Inc. He has
received honoraria for speaking for the companies.
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