American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation | 2021

Oral Ferric Maltol for the Treatment of Iron-Deficiency Anemia in Patients With CKD: A Randomized Trial and Open-Label Extension.

 
 

Abstract


RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE\nIron-deficiency anemia is common in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) not requiring maintenance dialysis. We evaluated effects of oral iron replacement therapy with ferric maltol in these patients.\n\n\nSTUDY DESIGN\nPhase 3, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial (AEGIS-CKD) and open-label extension.\n\n\nSETTING & PARTICIPANTS\nAdults with stage 3/4 CKD and iron-deficiency anemia at 30 US centers.\n\n\nINTERVENTION\nOral ferric maltol 30 mg or placebo twice daily for 16 weeks (2:1 randomization) followed by ferric maltol 30 mg twice daily for up to 36 weeks (all patients).\n\n\nOUTCOMES\nChange from baseline in hemoglobin (primary endpoint at week 16), ferritin, transferrin saturation, and serum iron; safety.\n\n\nRESULTS\n167 patients were randomized (ferric maltol n = 111, placebo n = 56). At week 16, hemoglobin had increased significantly with ferric maltol versus placebo (least-squares mean [standard error] difference: 0.5 [0.2] g/dL; 95% confidence interval 0.1-0.9; P=0.01). Ferritin, transferrin saturation, and serum iron increased with ferric maltol but declined with placebo (all P<0.05). Hemoglobin levels were sustained up to week 52 in patients continuing ferric maltol and increased in patients switching from placebo to ferric maltol. The most frequent adverse events were gastrointestinal (randomized phase: ferric maltol 41%, placebo 30%; open-label phase: 56% vs 46%, respectively). Adverse events led to treatment withdrawal in 7 patients (6%) receiving ferric maltol and 5 patients (9%) receiving placebo during double-blind treatment, and 11 patients (9%) during the open-label extension.\n\n\nLIMITATIONS\nHeterogeneity in baseline ferritin levels; high proportion of female participants; single-arm open-label extension.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nFerric maltol was associated with statistically significant (week 16) and sustained (up to week 52) increases in hemoglobin and iron indices in patients with CKD and iron deficiency, and was well tolerated during treatment for up to 52 weeks.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1053/j.ajkd.2021.03.020
Language English
Journal American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation

Full Text