SleepCited

Response to intravenous iron in patients with iron deficiency anemia (IDA) and restless leg syndrome (Willis-Ekbom disease).

Tahir Mehmood, Michael Auerbach, Christopher J Earley, Richard P Allen
Other Sleep medicine 2014 58 citations

Study Design

Study Type
Controlled Clinical Trial
Sample Size
42
Population
Patients with both iron deficiency anemia (IDA) and restless legs syndrome (RLS); 60 consecutive patients, 42 with follow-up data
Duration
43 weeks
Intervention
Response to intravenous iron in patients with iron deficiency anemia (IDA) and restless leg syndrome (Willis-Ekbom disease). 1000 mg IV low-molecular-weight iron dextran (INFeD) single infusion
Comparator
Pre-treatment baseline (no concurrent control group)
Primary Outcome
RLS symptom improvement 7-12 months after IV iron infusion
Effect Direction
Positive
Risk of Bias
High

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Iron deficiency anemia (IDA) engenders restless legs syndrome (RLS, aka Willis-Ekbom disease). Intravenous (IV) iron can rapidly reverse IDA and would be expected to similarly reverse RLS caused by IDA. This is the first consecutive case series evaluating the effects of IV iron therapy on RLS occurring with IDA (RLS-IDA). METHODS: RLS-IDA patients were evaluated before and 7-12 months after a 1000-mg IV infusion of low-molecular-weight iron dextran (INFeD(@)) using validated questionnaires and standardized telephone interview. Patients were classified as respondent versus nonrespondent for RLS improvement. RESULTS: Follow-up data were obtained on 42 (70%) of 60 consecutive RLS-IDA patients. The symptoms of RLS were reduced in 76% (32/42) with 47% (20/42) showing an extended response lasting >6 months. The response did not relate to age or gender, but tended to be less among African-Americans than Whites (40% (2/5) vs. 81% (30/37), p = 0.078). White respondents versus nonrespondents had higher hemoglobin levels after treatment (12.1 vs. 11.3 g/dl, p = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: RLS-IDA is reduced after administration of IV iron in most cases, but the 24% failing to respond was higher than expected. The nonrespondents all showed below-normal hemoglobin levels (<12.5 g/dl) suggesting a failure of adequate treatment of the iron deficiency. IV iron treatment of the RLS with IDA likely requires ensuring more than minimally adequate body iron stores to support iron delivery to the brain. For some, this may require a dose higher than the customary 1000-mg IV iron used for the treatment of either IDA or RLS alone.

TL;DR

RLS-IDA is reduced after administration of IV iron in most cases, but the 24% failing to respond was higher than expected, suggesting a failure of adequate treatment of the iron deficiency.

Used In Evidence Reviews