Findings from the CONFIRM-HF (Ferric CarboxymaltOse evaluatioN on perFormance in patients with IRon deficiency in coMbination with chronic Heart Failure) trial, point to a simple and safe solution for heart failure patients with iron deficiency who can experience significant and sustainable improvements in functional capacity and quality of life as well as reduced risk of hospital admission for worsening heart failure by iron supplementation.
CONFIRM-HF is a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, which enrolled 304 stable, symptomatic heart failure patients from 41 sites across nine European countries. All patients had iron deficiency, defined as a serum ferritin level < 100 ng/mL, or between 100 and 300 ng/mL with transferrin saturation < 20%. Subjects were randomized to receive either intravenous iron (n=152), given as ferric carboxymaltose solution (FCM), or a normal saline placebo (n=152), for 52 weeks. Completion of the six-minute walk test (6MWT) was required at baseline, and the primary endpoint of the study was improvement in this test at week 24.
Compared to placebo-treated subjects, those treated with FCM completed 33 extra meters in the 6MWT at week 24 (p=0.002), 42 extra meters at week 36, and 36 extra meters at week 52 (both p<0.001) and the improvement was seen in all subgroups. Despite the reduction in hospitalizations among FCM-treated patients, the number of deaths was similar in both groups, suggesting a one-year follow-up may not be long enough to detect differences in mortality.
Adverse events were mild, and occurred at a similar rate in both groups.
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