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UnknownNCT05114278

Effect of Intravenous Iron Supplementation on Celiac Disease Remission (IRONCEL)

Effect of Intravenous Iron Supplementation on Celiac Disease Remission in Patients With Iron Deficiency and Intestinal Villous Atrophy: a Randomized Trial

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
204 (estimated)
Sponsor
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study aims is to evaluate the efficacy of intravenous iron supplementation on celiac disease remission (total intestinal mucosal recovery). This randomized multicenter trial compare the administration of intravenous iron by infusion (Ferinject©: 15 mg/kg in NaCl solution in 30 min) and oral iron in combination; to patients receive only oral iron as standard care. The first benefit with IV Iron supplementation is to correct iron deficiency more rapidly than oral iron alone because of trouble of absorption in case of intestinal villous atrophy.

Detailed description

Celiac disease is an autoimmune-like disorder induced in genetically predisposed individuals by dietary proteins from wheat (gluten). Its frequency reaches 1% in Europe. In celiac patients, gluten induces small intestinal villous atrophy and, as a consequence, malnutrition. Celiac disease treatment relies on a long-life strict gluten-free diet that allows clinical and histological recovery and prevents long-term complications (autoimmune diseases, osteoporosis and malignancies). Remission is attested by total villous recovery on duodenal biopsy performed after one year of gluten free diet. Yet, in adults, systematic follow-up of biopsies for several years after gluten free diet initiation has recently revealed persistent villous atrophy in more than 40 % of cases with an increased risk in older patients (up to 56%). Lack of mucosal healing has been associated with the risk of complications in celiac, notably a risk factor for fractures and lymphoma. It is therefore necessary to define strategies to obtain and accelerate full recovery. Iron deficiency is strongly associated with celiac disease and is generally viewed as a consequence of small intestinal lesions and a symptom of malnutrition. Our preliminary clinical retrospective study showed more frequent iron deficiency anemia in celiac patients with (20/70; 29%) than without (11/88; 12.5%) villous atrophy (p = 0.015; OR: 2.78). Our previous experimental study suggests that iron deficiency may sustain tissue damage and delay mucosal recovery in celiac disease. Indeed the transferrin receptor (CD71) is overexpressed in the gut epithelium in case of iron deficiency and can interact with secretory IgA1 present in large amounts in the intestinal lumen of CD patients. Crosslinking of CD71 by polymeric IgA1 can induce production of inflammatory cytokines. Our working hypothesis is therefore that iron deficiency maintains aberrant expression of CD71 at the gut epithelial surface that sustains intestinal inflammation and epithelial damage. Iron supplementation of celiac patients with villous atrophy and iron deficiency may accelerate mucosal healing, villous recovery and remission.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGFerinjectExperimental group will receive intravenous iron infusion (Ferinject©: 15 mg/kg in NaCl solution IV) at randomization, 2weeks after randomization, 4weeks after randomization, and then every month for a total of one year. Comparison group will not receive any intravenous treatment. Both experimental and comparison groups will receive an oral iron supplementation (100 mg/day).
DRUGoral ironAll patients will receive an oral iron supplementation (100mg/day).

Timeline

Start date
2022-02-15
Primary completion
2026-04-15
Completion
2026-04-15
First posted
2021-11-09
Last updated
2022-01-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05114278. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.