Intravenous iron infusions in pediatric patients: A retrospective review of efficacy and safety

Author:

Strachan Caitlin1,Kugler Emmalee1,Devgan Kartik1,Nestor Jennifer2,Afridi Faraz3,Raju Riya4,Hunter Krystal5,Ahmed Rafat6

Affiliation:

1. Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, Camden, NJ, USA

2. Pediatric Critical Care, Nemours Children’s Hospital Dupont, Wilmington, DE, USA

3. Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA

4. Department of Pediatrics, Children’s Regional Hospital at Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, USA

5. Cooper Research Institute, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, USA

6. Department of Pediatric Hematology, Children’s Regional Hospital at Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, USA

Abstract

Pediatric iron deficiency anemia (IDA) is often treated with oral iron supplementation as the first-line therapy despite poor adherence. This single-institution retrospective chart review of pediatric patients was conducted to assess the safety, efficacy, and adherence of intravenous (IV) iron infusions compared to oral iron therapy in patients who had failed a trial of oral iron supplementation. We reviewed medical records of patients aged 1–21 with IDA who received at least one IV iron infusion at Cooper University Hospital between 2016 and 2021. Paired t-tests compared pre-infusion and post-infusion hematologic indices of hemoglobin (Hgb), mean corpuscular volume, red blood cell count, red cell distribution width, ferritin, total iron binding capacity, iron stores, and iron saturation. We compared adherence and adverse reactions to both oral iron supplementation and IV iron infusions using McNemar’s test. A total of 107 subjects were included (mean age of 12.7 years). Hgb, ferritin, iron, and iron saturation between pre-infusion and post-final infusion significantly improved (p < 0.001). Hgb, ferritin, and iron improved when subcategorizing by race and etiology of IDA. Adherence to IV iron infusions (70.1%) was significantly greater than adherence to oral iron therapy (43.0%). There were also significantly fewer adverse effects with IV iron infusions (3.7%) compared to oral iron (77.9%). We demonstrated the safety, efficacy, and improved adherence of IV iron infusions compared to oral iron supplementation for treatment of pediatric IDA in patients who were unable to tolerate oral iron supplementation. Future studies could compare adherence to multiple doses of IV iron infusions in contrast with other single-dosing IV iron formulations.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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