作者
Gaetano Bergamaschi,Fabiana Castiglione,R. D’Incà,Marco Astegiano,Walter Fries,Mónica Milla,Carolina Ciacci,Fernando Rizzello,Simone Saibeni,Rachele Ciccocioppo,Ambrogio Orlando,Fabrizio Bossa,Mariabeatrice Principi,Piero Vernia,Chiara Ricci,Maria Lia Scribano,Giorgia Bodini,Dario Mazzucco,Gabrio Bassotti,G. Riegler,Andrea Buda,Matteo Neri,Flavio Caprioli,Fabio Monica,A. Manca,Erica Villa,Gionata Fiorino,Nicola Aronico,Marco Vincenzo Lenti,Caterina Mengoli,Anna Testa,Maurizio Vecchi,Catherine Klersy,Antonio Di Sabatino,Giuseppe Amodeo,Elisabetta Antonelli,Noemi Sara Bertetti,Cristina Bezzio,Michele Campigotto,Roberta Caccaro,Manuela De Bona,C. Della Corte,Maria Giulia Demarzo,Giuliano Falasco,R. Fontana,Paolo Gionchetti,Paola Iovino,Federica Lepore,Greta Lorenzon,Vincenzo Marasco,Alessandro Paolini,Lucienne Pellegrini,A. Pieraccini,Tiziana Pinto-Vraca,Davide Giuseppe Ribaldone,G. Rizzuto,Jenny Roselli,Giovanni Santacroce,A. Todeschini,Marta Vernero,Anna Viola,Irene Zammarchi
摘要
Background The RIDART I study found a 13.6% prevalence of anemia in Italian patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD); most cases were due to iron-deficiency anemia (IDA). Aims To evaluate changes in hemoglobin concentration during a 24-week follow-up of anemic patients with IBD. Methods Follow-up laboratory and clinical data were obtained from RIDART I study patients with anemia. Factors affecting hemoglobin concentration, the impact of anemia on fatigue and quality of life (QoL), and its relationship with treatment, disease activity and disease complications were investigated. Results Hemoglobin was 108 g/L at baseline, increased to 121 g/L at follow-up week 12 (p < 0.001) and then stabilized until week 24, but most patients remained anemic, with IDA, throughout the study. Hemoglobin improvement was greater in patients receiving either oral or parenteral iron supplementation. Following hemoglobin normalization, anemia relapse rate during follow-up was 30%. Oral iron did not cause disease reactivation. Lower follow-up hemoglobin was associated with a higher probability of having active disease, clinical complications, increased fatigue and reduced QoL. Conclusions In anemic patients with IBD, anemia represents a long-lasting problem, in most cases persisting for up to 24 weeks, with high relapse rate and a negative impact on fatigue and QoL.