BMC Nephrology (Aug 2019)

Intravenous iron supplementation does not increase infectious disease risk in hemodialysis patients: a nationwide cohort-based case-crossover study

  • Chieh-Li Yen,
  • Yu-Sheng Lin,
  • Yueh-An Lu,
  • Hsin-Fu Lee,
  • Cheng-Chia Lee,
  • Ying-Chang Tung,
  • George Kuo,
  • Lung-Sheng Wu,
  • Ya-Chung Tian,
  • Pao-Hsien Chu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-019-1495-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background Studies have reported conflicting findings on the infection risk posed by intravenous iron supplementation among hemodialysis (HD) patients. We used a novel study design to assess associations between intravenous iron and infectious diseases. Methods Patients initiating HD between 1998 and 2008 were extracted from Taiwan’s National Health Insurance Research Database. Their first infectious disease in the period between 1.5 years after dialysis initiation and 2010 was identified and defined as the index date. Through the case-crossover design, the odds of exposure to intravenous iron within the 1-month period immediately preceding the index date (i.e., the case period) were compared with iron exposure in three different matched control periods for the same enrollee, thus possibly reducing some unmeasured confounders. Results A total of 1410 patients who met our enrollment criteria were extracted from incident HD patients. The odds of intravenous iron exposure during the case period versus total control periods exhibited no significant difference (odds ratio: 1.000, 95% confidence interval: 0.75–1.33). In subgroup analyses, this association remained nonsignificant across patients with diabetes mellitus, heart failure, chronic lung disease, venous catheter for HD, and higher iron load. Conclusions We found that intravenous iron supplementation did not increase short-term infection risk among HD patients.

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