학술논문

Feasibility of Intravenous Iron Isomaltoside to Improve Anemia and Quality of Life During Palliative Chemotherapy for Esophagogastric Adenocarcinoma.
Document Type
Article
Source
Nutrition & Cancer. Oct2018, Vol. 70 Issue 7, p1106-1117. 12p. 2 Diagrams, 2 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*ADENOCARCINOMA
*CANCER treatment
*ESOPHAGEAL tumors
*STOMACH tumors
*ANEMIA
*BLOOD transfusion
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*FERRITIN
*HEMOGLOBINS
*INTRAVENOUS therapy
*PALLIATIVE treatment
*IRON compounds
*QUALITY of life
*TRANSFERRIN
*WELL-being
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
*TREATMENT effectiveness
*TUMOR treatment
*THERAPEUTICS
Language
ISSN
0163-5581
Abstract
Background: Anemia is common with esophagogastric adenocarcinoma, increasing mortality, blood transfusions, and reducing quality of life (QOL). No clear evidence exists for safe and effective treatment. Methods: Anemic patients (Hb <12 g/dl women, <13 g/dl men) with esophagogastric adenocarcinoma were recruited before initiation of palliative chemotherapy. Patients were randomized to standard care or single dose of intravenous iron isomaltoside (IVI) before chemotherapy. Post-chemotherapy changes in hemoglobin (Hb), ferritin, transferrin saturations (TSAT), blood transfusions, and QOL were recorded for three cycles of chemotherapy. Results: Twenty-seven patients were randomized to standard care (n = 13) or IVI (n = 14). No significant change in Hb was seen (standard care MD -0.6 g/dl 95% CI -0.1-1.1 g/dl, P = 0.336; IVI MD +0.5 g/dl 95% CI -0.1-1.1 g/dl, P = 0.903). An increase in ferritin was seen with IVI after cycle one of chemotherapy (standard care 116 ng/ml; IVI 770 ng/ml, P < 0.05). No difference in blood transfusions was seen between groups (P = 0.851). IVI improved QOL with physical well-being, emotional well-being, anemia-specific QOL, trial outcome index, and total scores all exceeding minimum clinically important difference. No improvement was seen with standard care. Conclusions: This feasibility study suggests IVI improves quality of life and ferritin. Larger adequately powered studies are required to definitively conclude if hemoglobin and blood transfusion changes with IVI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]