ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Impact of Iron Deficiency and Its Correction on Mitochondrial Metabolism of the Cardiomyocyte (MitoCardioFer)

U

University Hospital, Angers

Status

Completed

Conditions

Iron-deficiency
Valvular Heart Disease

Treatments

Procedure: myocardial biopsy
Biological: blood sample
Procedure: sternal bone marrow biopsy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03541213
2017-A00904-49

Details and patient eligibility

About

Iron is involved in essential functions of the body. It allows the transport of oxygen in the blood, via hemoglobin, at the muscular level, via myoglobin, and it is also involved in cellular metabolism in general, in particular for the production of ATP at the mitochondrial level, within the cytochromes and iron-sulfur proteins of the respiratory chain.

Recently, iron deficiency has been identified as an important prognostic factor in heart failure patients. Iron therapy improves symptoms and physical performances of heart failure patients, even in the absence of anemia. As a result, the correction of iron deficiency is now proposed as one of the therapies for heart failure. However, the pathophysiology of the association between cardiac dysfunction and iron deficiency is still poorly understood.

The investigators previously developed a mouse model of iron deficiency without anemia, in which the investigators observed impaired physical performances, a decrease of left ventricular ejection fraction, and a decrease in mitochondrial complex I activity. These abnormalities were normalized after iron injection. These animal data suggest that iron deficiency is responsible for left ventricular dysfunction secondary to mitochondrial I complex abnormalities, and that iron therapy corrects them.

Iron deficiency is very common in the preoperative period of cardiac surgery, affecting 40 to 50% of patients. During this surgery, it is possible to perform a myocardial biopsy without risk to the patient.

The purpose of this study is to verify in patients requiring valvular heart surgery, if iron deficiency is responsible for a decrease in mitochondrial complex I activity and a decrease in cardiac function during the perioperative period, and to verify whether iron treatment improves these abnormalities.

Full description

Iron is involved in essential functions of the body. It allows the transport of oxygen in the blood, via hemoglobin, at the muscular level, via myoglobin, and it is also involved in cellular metabolism in general, in particular for the production of ATP at the mitochondrial level, within the cytochromes and iron-sulfur proteins of the respiratory chain.

Iron deficiency has been shown to be responsible for fatigue and muscle weakness, regardless of the presence of an anemia. Recently, iron deficiency has been identified as an important prognostic factor in heart failure patients, with a prevalence increasing with NYHA class level, and association with mortality. Iron therapy improves the symptoms of heart failure patients and the 6-minute walk test, even in the absence of anemia. The correction of iron deficiency is now proposed as one of the therapies for heart failure. However, the pathophysiology of the association between cardiac dysfunction and iron deficiency is still poorly understood.

The investigators previously developed a mouse model of iron deficiency without anemia, in which the investigators observed impaired physical performances, a decrease of left ventricular ejection fraction, and a decrease in mitochondrial complex I activity. These abnormalities were normalized after iron injection. These animal data suggest that iron deficiency is responsible for left ventricular dysfunction secondary to mitochondrial I complex abnormalities, and that iron therapy corrects them.

Iron deficiency is very common in the preoperative period of cardiac surgery, affecting 40 to 50% of patients. During this surgery, it is possible to perform a myocardial biopsy without risk to the patient. There is therefore an opportunity to further explore the impact of iron deficiency and its treatment on mitochondrial energy metabolism of cardiomyocytes. We hypothesize that the activity of the mitochondrial complex I is decreased in the presence of iron deficiency and that the iron treatment corrects this decrease.

The purpose of this study is to verify in patients requiring valvular heart surgery, if iron deficiency is responsible for a decrease in mitochondrial complex I activity and a decrease in cardiac function during the perioperative period, and to verify whether iron treatment improves these abnormalities.

Enrollment

55 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age ≥ 18 years
  • Patients that must be operated for a valvular heart surgery (aortic or mitral) scheduled in the month which follows the anaesthesia consultation (visit of inclusion)
  • The preoperative iron status is known
  • Patient signed informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Refusal of the patient to participate
  • Refusal of the surgeon or the anaesthetist who are responsible of patient management
  • Patients with a known iron overload (for example : hemochromatosis)
  • Counter-indication in the realization of a sternal bone marrow biopsy or myocardial biopsy (for example : endocarditis)
  • Adult patients under legal guardianship
  • Pregnancy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

55 participants in 3 patient groups

Control group
Other group
Description:
Patients with no iron deficiency prior to inclusion and who did not receive intravenous iron prior to inclusion. Intervention : myocardial biopsy, sternal bone marrow biopsy and blood sample (as in the other arms)
Treatment:
Biological: blood sample
Procedure: myocardial biopsy
Procedure: sternal bone marrow biopsy
Iron deficiency group
Other group
Description:
Patients with iron deficiency who did not receive intravenous iron prior to inclusion. Intervention : myocardial biopsy, sternal bone marrow biopsy and blood sample (as in the other arms)
Treatment:
Biological: blood sample
Procedure: myocardial biopsy
Procedure: sternal bone marrow biopsy
Iron treated group
Other group
Description:
Patients with iron deficiency who received intravenous iron prior to inclusion (greater than or equal to 1 g ferric carboxymaltose). Intervention : myocardial biopsy, sternal bone marrow biopsy and blood sample (as in the other arms)
Treatment:
Biological: blood sample
Procedure: myocardial biopsy
Procedure: sternal bone marrow biopsy

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems