Anemia is a frequent condition in burn patients due to a mixture of blood loss and chronic inflammation. Transfusions increase the probability of serious infections and reduce overall survival, especially when unrelated to perioperative blood loss. Once the surgical phase in burn patients is completed, the role of parenteral iron administration in the reduction of subsequent transfusions is not well established. Burn patients subjected to at least two surgeries and presenting progressive anemia after concluding the surgical phase, without major symptoms, were selected (n=12). Those patients with confirmed iron deficiency were treated with intravenous (i.v.) ferric carboxymaltose (n=8). Subsequently, these patients were compared with a group of 18 control patients selected from our historical database (n=1375), matching controls by age (±5 years), sex, and TBSA burn (±6%). The objective was to verify if i.v. iron administration reduced the need for blood transfusions after the surgical phase. The analysis concluded that none of the cases treated required transfusions compared to 44% of the controls. There were no side effects related to the i.v. iron infusion. This result suggests that i.v. iron supplementation with ferric carboxymaltose could be an alternative in anemic patients without major symptoms once the surgical phase is completed. Iron deficiency should be assessed and i.v. supplementation must be administered if required in burn patients showing progressive anemia.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7894841PMC

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