Background. Iron deficiency anemia in chronic kidney disease is commonly treated with one of three intravenous irons - iron dextran, iron sucrose, or iron gluconate. Substantial pharmacologic differences between drugs exist, but their ability to saturate transferrin has not been compared. Drugs that may lead to rapid transferrin saturation may lead to greater efficacy but also increased toxicity if transferring-mediated uptake of iron is the basis of this toxicity. Methods. We studied the in vitro ability of the three intravenous irons to donate iron to transferrin. Transferrin saturation was studied by direct visualization of the transferrin bands by urea polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), as well as a functional assay that evaluated the ability of iron to half saturate transferrin in a dose-dependent (0 to 100 μg/mL) and time-dependent (15 to 180 min) manner. Half-maximal dose (EC50) of iron needed to saturate transferrin was evaluated. Results. Nondextran irons were able to saturate transferrin in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner. There was more rapid transferrin saturation with iron gluconate compared to iron sucrose. The slope of the EC50 versus dose iron gluconate titration curve was -0.021 nmol/μg/mL (95% CI -0.025 to -0.017, P < 0.0001), for iron sucrose -0.006 nmol/μg/mL (95% CI -0.010 to -0.002, P = 0.002), and for iron dextran -0.001 nmol/μg/mL (95% CI -0.004 to 0.003, P > 0.2). The least square mean EC50 computed for mean iron concentration was 5.95 nmol for iron gluconate (95% CI 5.82 to 6.08), 6.73 nmol for iron sucrose (95% CI 6.59 to 6.86), and 7.24 nmol for iron dextran (95% CI 7.11 to 7.38). Similar results were seen for the time-dependent transferrin saturation (drug x time interaction, F 6.0, P < 0.01). Urea PAGE analysis showed similar results as the functional assay. Conclusion. Substantial heterogeneity in direct iron transfer from iron pharmaceuticals in vitro suggests that differences may exist in safety and efficacy of these drugs in vivo. In vivo studies are needed to compare the safety and efficacy of existing nondextran parenteral irons to better define the therapeutic ratio.
CITATION STYLE
Agarwal, R. (2004). Transferrin saturation with intravenous irons: An in vitro study. Kidney International, 66(3), 1139–1144. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1755.2004.00864.x
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