Supplementation with oral vs. intravenous iron for anemia with IBD or gastrointestinal bleeding: is oral iron getting a bad rap?
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the efficacy and safety of oral versus intravenous iron supplementation, particularly in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and assess whether lower oral doses could be as effective as higher doses with fewer side effects.
Results Summary
Both IV and oral iron effectively raised hemoglobin levels in iron-deficiency anemia, with no evidence that IV iron works faster. Low-dose oral iron showed comparable efficacy to higher doses but with fewer side effects, and oral iron did not worsen IBD symptoms.
Population
Patients with iron-deficiency anemia, particularly those with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
Effective Dosage
One ferrous sulfate tablet per day (low-dose oral iron).
Duration
Not specified.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Both IV and oral iron | increase | hemoglobin levels | iron-deficiency anemia | - | can effectively raise | #1 |
IV iron | no change | hemoglobin | - | at a faster pace | no evidence that can raise | #2 |
low-dose iron | no change | - | - | - | has comparable efficacy | #3 |
low-dose iron | decrease | side effects | - | - | with fewer | #4 |
both oral and IV iron | no change | - | IBD | - | are effective | #5 |
oral iron | no change | clinical symptoms | IBD | - | no convincing evidence that activates or exacerbates | #6 |
Although iron supplementation is commonly prescribed, the amount of elemental iron needed to achieve clinical efficacy, and the optimal method of supplementation, are under debate. Use of intravenous (IV) iron replacement is increasingly being advocated. We explore the physiology of iron supplementation, review clinical data suggesting that the typical oral dosing of iron may be excessive, and compare IV and oral methods of iron supplementation with a focus on inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Both IV and oral iron can effectively raise hemoglobin levels in iron-deficiency anemia. There is no evidence that IV iron can raise hemoglobin at a faster pace. Side effects of oral iron are probably related to the relatively high doses of elemental iron that are typically prescribed. Emerging data suggest that low-dose iron has comparable efficacy, with fewer side effects. In IBD, both oral and IV iron are effective, and there is no convincing evidence that oral iron activates or exacerbates clinical symptoms. The use of a low starting dose of oral iron, such as one ferrous sulfate tablet per day, for treatment of iron deficiency is worth considering.