Iron Deficiency and Incident Heart Failure in Older Community‐Dwelling Individuals

Author:

Sharma Shilpa12,Katz Ronit3,Chaves Paulo H.M.4,Hoofnagle Andrew N.3,Kizer Jorge R.5,Bansal Nisha3,Ganz Tomas1,Ix Joachim H.67

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Los Angeles CA USA

2. Nephrology Section Veteran Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System Los Angeles CA USA

3. University of Washington Seattle WA USA

4. Benjamin Leon Center for Geriatric Research and Education, Department of Translational Medicine, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine Florida International University Miami Florida USA

5. Cardiology Section, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Departments of Medicine, Epidemiology and Biostatistics University of California San Francisco San Francisco CA USA

6. Division of Nephrology‐Hypertension, Department of Medicine University of California San Diego San Diego CA USA

7. Nephrology Section Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System La Jolla CA USA

Abstract

AbstractAimsAmong persons with prevalent heart failure (HF), iron deficiency has been linked to HF admissions, and intravenous iron replacement improves HF outcomes. Recent studies in persons with chronic kidney disease (CKD) demonstrate that iron deficiency is associated with incident HF. This study aimed to determine the relationship of iron status with incident HF in community‐dwelling older adults irrespective of their kidney function.MethodsIn this case‐cohort study, 1,006 Cardiovascular Health Study participants (785 from the random sub‐cohort [including 193 HF cases] and 221 additional HF cases [N = 414 total HF cases]) aged ≥ 65 years without HF (41% with CKD), we used weighted Cox models to evaluate associations of iron status with incident HF. Participants were categorized based on quartiles of transferrin saturation and ferritin as “iron replete” (27.3%), “functional iron deficiency” (7.7%), “iron deficiency” (11.8%), “mixed iron deficiency” (5.6%), “high iron” (9.3%) and “non‐classified” (38.1%), consistent with prior studies.ResultsCompared to older persons who were iron replete, those with iron deficiency were at higher risk of incident HF (HR 1.47; 1.02–2.11) in models adjusting for demographics, HF risk factors, and estimated glomerular filtration rate. Other iron categories did not associate with incident HF. The relationship of iron deficiency with incident HF did not differ by CKD status (interaction P value 0.2).ConclusionsAmong community‐dwelling elders, iron deficiency is independently associated with incident HF, an association that was similar irrespective of CKD status. Our findings support conduct of clinical trials of iron replacement for prevention of HF in older adults with iron deficiency.

Funder

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Office of Rural Health

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

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1. Metabolic cycles: A unifying concept for energy transfer in the heart;Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology;2024-10

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