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Dialysis Patients’ Response to IV Iron with Elevated
Ferritin: The DRIVE Study2
Adult anemic hemodialysis (HD) patients with elevated serum ferritin levels and
low TSAT may not have adequate iron for healthy erythropoiesis despite receiving
adequate EPO doses. In these patients, elevated serum ferritin may reflect the presence
of inflammation and reticulo-endothelial blockade.
The DRIVE study was designed to determine whether and how HD patients with elevated
serum ferritin levels, low TSAT, and persistent anemia despite adequate epoetin
therapy would respond to a course of IV iron therapy.
In this study, a total of 134 HD patients with Hb ≤11.0 g/dL, elevated serum
ferritin (500-1200 ng/mL), TSAT ≤25%, and epoetin doses ≥225 IU/kg/week or
22,500 IU/week were randomized to receive Ferrlecit® (sodium ferric gluconate
complex in sucrose injection) as 1 gram delivered over 8 dialysis sessions or no
iron. All patients received a 25% increase in epoetin dose.
VIEW COMPLETE STUDY PROTOCOL
REFERENCES
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Key Findings2
In anemic HD patients
with elevated serum ferritin, low TSAT, and receiving adequate EPO doses a course
of Ferrlecit® therapy in conjunction with a 25% increase in epoetin dose
significantly improved Hb and TSAT without exacerbating existing inflammation.
Ferrlecit® therapy was safe and well tolerated in this population with no treatment-related
serious adverse events reported.*
The results confirm that elevated serum ferritin in this patient population is not
an accurate indicator of iron status and that many of these patients may benefit
from a course of IV iron therapy.
*Study was not powered for safety
VIEW EFFICACY RESULTS
VIEW SAFETY SUMMARY
ORDER REPRINTS
VIEW WEBCAST OF STUDY RESULTS
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