Study of patients with iron deficiency and HF in Ireland: prevalence and treatment budget impact
- PMID: 35747488
- PMCID: PMC8822530
- DOI: 10.5837/bjc.2021.010
Study of patients with iron deficiency and HF in Ireland: prevalence and treatment budget impact
Abstract
This study aims to present the screening, prevalence and treatment of heart failure (HF) patients with iron deficiency in an Irish hospital and use an economic model to estimate the budget impact of treating eligible patients with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose (IV FCM). Retrospective data were collected on 151 HF patients over a one-year period from all newly referred HF patients to a secondary care hospital. This included 36 patients with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and 115 with reduced ejection fraction (HPrEF). An existing budget impact model was adapted to incorporate Irish unit cost and resource use data to estimate the annual budget impact of treating patients with IV FCM. The total number of HFrEF patients who met criteria for iron replacement was 44 (38% of total HFrEF patients); of this, only nine (20%) were treated. The budget impact model estimates that treating all eligible patients with IV FCM in this single centre would save 40 bed-days and over €7,600/year. To improve the quality of life and reduce hospitalisation, further identification and treatment of iron deficient patients should be implemented. Expanding the use of IV iron nationally would be cost and bed saving.
Keywords: Ireland; budget impact; heart failure; iron deficiency.
Copyright © 2021 Medinews (Cardiology) Limited.
Conflict of interest statement
None declared.
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