Division of Wellbeing and Preventable Chronic Diseases, Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia.
Department of Nephrology, Division of Medicine, Royal Darwin Hospital, P.O. Box 41326, Casuarina, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia.
Trials. 2021 Dec 2;22(1):868. doi: 10.1186/s13063-021-05854-w.
The effectiveness of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents, which are the main stay of managing anaemia of chronic kidney disease (CKD), is largely dependent on adequate body iron stores. The iron stores are determined by the levels of serum ferritin concentration and transferrin saturation. These two surrogate markers of iron stores are used to guide iron replacement therapy. Most Aboriginal and/or Torres Islander Australians of the Northern Territory (herein respectfully referred to as First Nations Australians) with end-stage kidney disease have ferritin levels higher than current guideline recommendations for iron therapy. There is no clear evidence to guide safe and effective treatment with iron in these patients. We aim to assess the impact of intravenous iron treatment on all-cause death and hospitalisation with a principal diagnosis of all-cause infection in First Nations patients on haemodialysis with anaemia, high ferritin levels and low transferrin saturation METHODS: In a prospective open-label blinded endpoint randomised controlled trial, a total of 576 participants on maintenance haemodialysis with high ferritin (> 700 μg/L and ≤ 2000 μg/L) and low transferrin saturation (< 40%) from all the 7 renal units across the Northern Territory of Australia will be randomised 1:1 to receive intravenous iron polymaltose 400 mg once monthly (200 mg during 2 consecutive haemodialysis sessions) (Arm A) or no IV iron treatment (standard treatment) (Arm B). Rescue therapy will be administered when the ferritin levels fall below 700 μg/L or when clinically indicated. The primary outcome will be the differences between the two study arms in the risk of hospitalisation with all-cause infection or death. An economic analysis and several secondary and tertiary outcomes analyses will also be performed.
The INFERR clinical trial will address significant uncertainty on the safety and efficacy of iron therapy in First Nations Australians with CKD with hyperferritinaemia and evidence of iron deficiency. This will hopefully lead to the development of evidence-based guidelines. It will also provide the opportunity to explore the causes of hyperferritinaemia in First Nations Australians from the Northern Territory.
This trial is registered with The Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR): ACTRN12620000705987 . Registered 29 June 2020.
促红细胞生成素刺激剂是治疗慢性肾脏病(CKD)贫血的主要手段,其疗效在很大程度上取决于充足的体内铁储存。铁储存量由血清铁蛋白浓度和转铁蛋白饱和度这两个替代标志物来确定,用于指导铁替代治疗。北领地(以下简称第一民族澳大利亚人)的大多数患有终末期肾病的土著和/或托雷斯海峡岛民的铁蛋白水平高于当前铁治疗指南建议的水平。对于这些患者,没有明确的证据来指导铁的安全有效治疗。我们的目的是评估静脉铁治疗对所有原因死亡和因所有原因感染导致的住院治疗的影响,这些患者是在北领地的 7 个肾脏单位中的任何一个进行维持性血液透析的、患有贫血、高铁蛋白水平(>700μg/L 且≤2000μg/L)和低转铁蛋白饱和度(<40%)的第一民族澳大利亚人。
在一项前瞻性开放标签盲终点随机对照试验中,总共将有 576 名来自澳大利亚北领地的所有 7 个肾脏单位的接受维持性血液透析治疗的患者被随机分为 1:1 组,分别接受每月 1 次静脉注射多糖铁复合物 400mg(200mg 分两次连续进行血液透析)(A 组)或不接受静脉铁治疗(标准治疗)(B 组)。当铁蛋白水平降至 700μg/L 以下或出现临床指征时,将给予抢救治疗。主要结局将是两组研究对象在因所有原因感染或死亡导致住院治疗的风险方面的差异。还将进行经济分析和几项次要及次要结局分析。
INFERR 临床试验将解决关于有高铁蛋白血症和缺铁证据的 CKD 第一民族澳大利亚人的铁治疗安全性和疗效的重大不确定性。这有望为制定循证指南提供依据。它还将提供一个机会来探索北领地第一民族澳大利亚人的铁蛋白升高的原因。
本试验在澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册中心(ANZCTR)注册:ACTRN12620000705987。注册于 2020 年 6 月 29 日。