AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic heart failure (CHF) patients often experience poor health-related quality of life (HRQoL), potentially linked to iron deficiency, prompting a detailed analysis of the FAIR-HF study.
  • The study involved 459 iron-deficient CHF patients receiving either intravenous ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) or placebo, with HRQoL assessed using the EQ-5D and Kansas City cardiomyopathy questionnaire at various intervals.
  • Results showed that FCM significantly improved HRQoL scores across multiple measures at 4 weeks and beyond, regardless of the patients' anemia status, highlighting the importance of iron management in CHF treatment.

Article Abstract

Aims: Patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) show impaired health-related quality of life (HRQoL), an important target for therapeutic intervention. Impaired iron homeostasis may be one mechanism underlying the poor physical condition of CHF patients. This detailed subanalysis of the previously published FAIR-HF study evaluated baseline HRQoL in iron-deficient patients with CHF and the effect of intravenous ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) on HRQoL.

Methods And Results: FAIR-HF randomized 459 patients with reduced left ventricular ejection fraction and iron deficiency, with or without anaemia, to FCM or placebo (2:1). Health-related quality of life was assessed at baseline and after 4, 12, and 24 weeks of therapy using the generic EQ-5D questionnaire and disease-specific Kansas City cardiomyopathy questionnaire (KCCQ). Baseline mean visual analogue scale (VAS) score was 54.3 ± 16.4 and KCCQ overall summary score was 52.4 ± 18.8. Ferric carboxymaltose significantly improved VAS and KCCQ (mean differences from baseline in KCCQ overall, clinical and total symptom scores, P< 0.001 vs. placebo) at all time points. At week 24, significant improvement vs. placebo was observed in four of the five EQ-5D dimensions: mobility (P= 0.004), self-care (P< 0.001), pain/discomfort (P= 0.006), anxiety/depression (P= 0.012), and usual activity (P= 0.035). Ferric carboxymaltose improved all KCCQ domain mean scores from Week 4 onward (P≤ 0.05), except for self-efficacy and social limitation. Effects were present in both anaemic and non-anaemic patients.

Conclusions: HRQoL is impaired in iron-deficient patients with CHF. Intravenous FCM significantly improved HRQoL after 4 weeks, and throughout the remaining study period. The positive effects of FCM were independent of anaemia status.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3533918PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehr504DOI Listing

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