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Introduction: Anaemia due to iron and vitamin deficiency among patients with critical limb ischemia is high (>50%). The prevalence of a higher rate of anaemia extends into the three months prior to revascularization surgery, it is associated with longer hospital stays and more transfusions in addition to being a factor in poor prognoses. Study and treatment of anaemia within the perioperative period could improve the surgical outcomes, including the recovery and the quality of patients' lives. There are several types of intravenous iron preparations with different administration protocols, but there is not a consensus on the timing and type of the appropriate iron therapy. To the best of our knowledge, there is no data on the performance of intravenous iron in the management of preoperative anaemia in patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) in vascular surgery.
Methods and analysis: The IRONPAD Study is a phase IV randomised controlled trial with two branches of treatment on the efficacy of intravenous iron therapy for the optimisation of blood use and prognosis in the perioperative period of patients with anaemia undergoing revascularisation for chronic lower limb ischemia. The study randomises 240 patients with anaemia to: treat with a single intravenous dose of ferric carboxymaltose (1000 mg) or no treatment vs oral iron supplements (if severe anaemia) a minimum of two days prior to lower limb revascularisation surgery. The primary outcome is to reduce the incidence of transfusion from randomisation up to 30+7 days after the main surgery. The secondary outcomes will be included to establish the optimal preoperative moment of increased intravenous iron administration, to raise haemoglobin levels; to study the evolution of haemoglobin from inclusion to 30+7 days after surgery; and to determine the impact of anaemia and its treatment on the length of hospital stay, morbidity and mortality, as well as the quality of life in this period.
Full description
The IRONPAD Study is a phase IV randomised controlled trial with two branches of treatment on the efficacy of intravenous iron therapy for the optimisation of blood use and prognosis in the perioperative period of patients with anaemia undergoing revascularisation for chronic lower limb ischemia.
Patients admitted to hospital with anaemia and indication of elective revascularisation surgery for chronic ischemia of the lower limbs will be eligible for screening. Anaemia in this study is established following the WHO criteria with haemoglobin (Hb) <130 g/L in men and <120 g/L in women 21.
Patients will be selected according to the usual practice, without excluding patients because of comorbidity or other reasons that may affect results (selection bias).
Prior to inclusion, freely given written informed consent will be obtained from all patients. Once included, each patient will be masked into a unique identity number (correlative according to inclusion), as a reference of patient ID in the registry.
Each patient will be randomised to a line A or line B of treatment.
Both lines may be followed in addition to taking vitamin B12 and folic acid, if indicated.
The patient, once included in the study, may receive a blood transfusion if the following criteria are met:
Absolute indication: Hemodynamic instability Active bleeding Hb <7 g/dl
Relative indications: in case of Hb <8.5 g/dL or haematocrit <28% following the clinical criteria of the medical specialist.
Interventions to be measured:
The data collected at baseline will include patients' past medical history, medications, blood tests (including hemogram, iron tests and renal function), comorbidity index (Charlson Scale), lower limbs chronic ischemia category and the limb scheduled for revascularisation (including registry of any trophic lesions and if they have signs of active infection), height, weight and body-mass index of the patient. In addition, already validated quality of life questionnaire, the Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36) will be completed.
Procedure data will record: date of IV iron treatment, if received, dose and any adverse events during or after administration; ASA (American Society of Anaesthesiologists) risk level; type of surgery performed for revascularisation of lower limbs, information on clinical success and complications of the intervention. Blood records will include haemoglobin before and first day after surgery and number of red blood cell units of or any other blood component transfused during the surgical procedure. If surgery does not finally take place, data from the 30 days after inclusion will be registered for analysis with intention to treat.
The hospital discharge visit will record: date of discharge; last hemogram; number of blood transfusions from the postoperative period until discharge; days in intensive care; adverse events such as medical and surgical complications as well as mortality.
The final follow-up visit will take place 30 days after the main surgery (with + 7 day window) it would be performed by telephone, in the outpatient consultation or in the hospital if the patient continues to be hospitalised; in that case, the discharge visit and final visit will be made simultaneously. It will record: blood tests (including hemogram, iron tests), clinical success, serious adverse events (SAE) and mortality, which may have occurred between hospital discharge and the visit in addition to Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36). See Fig. 1 for Assessment flow diagram.
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240 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Ana Apodaka, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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