Non-anemic Iron Deficiency
Conditions
Brief summary
The objective is to investigate the treatment of non-anemic iron deficiency (NAID) and the impact on development of anemia later in pregnancy. Anemia in the third trimester has been identified as a risk factor for maternal and fetal morbidity that might lead to mortality. Due to the high incidence of NAID in pregnancy, there is an opportunity for early screening and treatment to decrease progression to anemia. The primary aim of this study is to establish if treatment of NAID will result in higher third trimester hemoglobin values and decrease incidence of anemia at term.
Detailed description
All women who fit the inclusion criteria will be approached to be recruited for participation at Stony Brook University Hospital outpatient clinic at less than 20 weeks gestational age. Women who agree to participate in the study will be consented. The study team member will obtain consent from participants and randomize the patient into either the treatment or placebo group based on a 1:1 randomization scheme generated by randomization.com. The study team member will remain blinded, as randomization of subjects will be coordinated by departmental research coordinator, who will not have any interaction with subjects. The treatment group will receive oral ferrous sulfate 325mg (containing 65 mg of elemental iron) daily and a prenatal vitamin, and the placebo group will receive prenatal vitamin and a placebo pill. The prenatal vitamin, which contains iron, will be the same exact formula and will be given to all participants in both control and treatment groups. Only the treatment group will receive the extra iron supplement. The treatment group will also receive vitamin C 500mg daily to assist with iron absorption. Both groups will receive oral docusate sodium (Colace) 100mg twice daily as needed to decrease the risk of constipation. The randomization will be blinded to the participant, along with the medical provider and study team. Since the Research Pharmacy is able to combine the iron and Vitamin C into one pill, and both groups will receive Colace and prenatal vitamin, the total pill count will not differ from the treatment group and placebo group. Patients who agree to participate in the study will continue with routine prenatal care and testing, which includes a repeat complete blood count (CBC) in both the second and third trimester, at approximately 24-28 weeks and 34-36 weeks, as is standard of care. In the second and third trimester, a questionnaire will be given to the subject to assess fatigue scores, experience of side effects and severity of side effects. At that time, a study team member will also perform a pill count to assess for compliance. At time of admission to the hospital for delivery, a repeat ferritin level will be drawn with routine lab work, including a CBC, with no additional risk of blood draw to the patient as this is part of standard of care. The ferritin test will be for research purposes for the study, but will not require an additional blood draw. Clinical anemia will be defined as a hemoglobin level less than or equal to 11 g/dL. While there is no normative data in the literature on ferritin levels in pregnancy, we will define a low ferritin level as \<30 mcg/L based on both retrospective pregnancy data and standardized ferritin levels in the non pregnant patient population.
Interventions
Oral ferrous sulfate 325 mg once daily, containing 65 mg of elemental iron to treat non-anemic iron deficiency
Oral prenatal vitamin once daily for both groups
Oral docusate sodium 100 mg twice daily as needed, to treat constipation secondary to oral iron supplementation
Oral ascorbic acid 500 mg daily, to improve absorption of oral iron
Oral placebo pill once daily
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* English speaking * age 18-55 * less than 20 weeks gestational age * low ferritin level (\<30mcg/L) in the first trimester * normal hemoglobin level (\>11g/dL) in the first trimester
Exclusion criteria
* Women with anemia diagnosed in the first trimester (HgB ≤11 g/dL) * Women with antepartum iron supplementation, except prenatal vitamin, within 3 months * Women with iron overload or hypersensitivity * Women with significant vaginal bleeding prior to enrollment * Women with chronic illness: SLE, hemoglobinopathies, HIV, inflammatory bowel disease, active cancer, prior bariatric surgery
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Third trimester hemoglobin | 28 weeks to 36 weeks | Incidence of anemia, hemoglobin value \<11 mg/dL, in the third trimester |
| Delivery admission hemoglobin | From date of randomization until to 42 weeks | hemoglobin value \<11 mg/dL |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Maternal anemia | Enrollment to 30 days postpartum | Timing of diagnosis |
| Incidence of preterm delivery | Enrollment to 30 days postpartum | Preterm delivery rate |
| Incidence of maternal hemorrhage | Enrollment to 30 days postpartum | Postpartum hemorrhage rate |
| Incidence of treatment of anemia | Enrollment to 30 days postpartum | Need for IV iron or blood transfusion |
| Incidence of infection | Enrollment to 30 days postpartum | infection rate |
| Maternal hospital stay | Enrollment to 30 days postpartum | length of hospital stay |
| Infant weight | Time of birth to 30 days of life | Birth weight Birth weight, NICU admission, perinatal death |
| Incidence of neonatal intensive care unit admission | Time of birth to 30 days of life | Rate of NICU admission Birth weight, NICU admission, perinatal death |
| Rate of poor perinatal outcome | Time of birth to 30 days of life | Incidence of perinatal death Birth weight, NICU admission, perinatal death |
Countries
United States