TY - JOUR
T1 - Parenteral Iron Therapy
T2 - Examining Current Evidence for Use in Athletes
AU - Fensham, Nikita
AU - McKay, Alannah Kelly Anne
AU - Sim, Marc
AU - Peeling, Peter
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Georg Thieme Verlag. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024/6
Y1 - 2024/6
N2 - A high prevalence of iron deficiency exists in athlete populations. Various mechanisms, including increased losses through sweat, haemolysis, haematuria, and gastrointestinal micro-ischemia; inadequate dietary intake; and transient exercise-induced increases in the regulatory hormone, hepcidin, contribute to the increased prevalence in athletes. Indeed, hepcidin has been shown to peak around 3-6 hours post-exercise, limiting iron absorption from the gut. As the practitioner's ability to control losses is limited, the key to treatment of iron deficiency in athletes is optimal timing of dietary and oral iron supplementation around these periods of reduced gut absorption. While timing and dosing schedule strategies might be sufficient to treat iron deficiency non-anaemia, the significant lag to impact iron status is relatively long. Therefore, in iron deficiency anaemia, the use of parenteral iron has the benefit of rapid repletion of iron stores and normalisation of haemoglobin status, while bypassing the action of hepcidin at the gut. Furthermore, newer intravenous formulations can be administered as a single total dose over 15-60 min and have a similar safety profile to oral treatment. This review discusses the existing evidence for parenteral iron use in athletes and the unique context for consideration when choosing the parenteral route in this population.
AB - A high prevalence of iron deficiency exists in athlete populations. Various mechanisms, including increased losses through sweat, haemolysis, haematuria, and gastrointestinal micro-ischemia; inadequate dietary intake; and transient exercise-induced increases in the regulatory hormone, hepcidin, contribute to the increased prevalence in athletes. Indeed, hepcidin has been shown to peak around 3-6 hours post-exercise, limiting iron absorption from the gut. As the practitioner's ability to control losses is limited, the key to treatment of iron deficiency in athletes is optimal timing of dietary and oral iron supplementation around these periods of reduced gut absorption. While timing and dosing schedule strategies might be sufficient to treat iron deficiency non-anaemia, the significant lag to impact iron status is relatively long. Therefore, in iron deficiency anaemia, the use of parenteral iron has the benefit of rapid repletion of iron stores and normalisation of haemoglobin status, while bypassing the action of hepcidin at the gut. Furthermore, newer intravenous formulations can be administered as a single total dose over 15-60 min and have a similar safety profile to oral treatment. This review discusses the existing evidence for parenteral iron use in athletes and the unique context for consideration when choosing the parenteral route in this population.
KW - athlete
KW - intravenous iron
KW - iron supplement
KW - nutrient deficiency
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85179965465&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1055/a-2211-0813
DO - 10.1055/a-2211-0813
M3 - Review article
C2 - 37963599
AN - SCOPUS:85179965465
SN - 0172-4622
VL - 45
SP - 496
EP - 503
JO - International Journal of Sports Medicine
JF - International Journal of Sports Medicine
IS - 7
ER -