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. 2026 Jan 28;18(3):416.
doi: 10.3390/cancers18030416.

High-Dose Intravenous Ferric Carboxymaltose/Derisomaltose Without ESAs for Cancer-Related Anemia in Japan: A Retrospective Single-Center Cohort Study

Affiliations

High-Dose Intravenous Ferric Carboxymaltose/Derisomaltose Without ESAs for Cancer-Related Anemia in Japan: A Retrospective Single-Center Cohort Study

Shinya Kajiura et al. Cancers (Basel). .

Abstract

Background/Objectives: In Japan, cancer-related anemia (CRA) is common, and erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) are not approved for chemotherapy-induced anemia. Modern intravenous (IV) iron formulations, such as ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) and ferric derisomaltose (FDI), enable high-dose repletion; however, real-world evidence in ESA-free oncology settings remains limited. Methods: This single-center retrospective study included patients with CRA (N = 55) who received high-dose IV iron (FCM or FDI). Iron phenotypes were classified as absolute iron deficiency (ID), functional ID, or non-ID. The primary endpoint was hemoglobin (Hb) change from baseline to approximately 1 month (21-45 days) in the non-transfused patients. Secondary endpoints included responder rate (ΔHb ≥ 1.0 g/dL), transfusion avoidance rate, dosing adequacy relative to Ganzoni-calculated iron deficit, and safety, particularly hypophosphatemia. Results: Among the non-transfused patients, mean Hb increased from 8.76 ± 1.34 g/dL to 9.73 ± 1.75 g/dL (mean ΔHb +0.92 ± 1.44 g/dL; p < 0.001). The responder and transfusion avoidance rates were 48.9% and 81.8%, respectively. Functional ID was most prevalent (52.7%), with clinically meaningful Hb responses. A total of 38.2% achieved approximately 1000 mg dosing. The safety profile was excellent, and no infusion reactions or symptomatic hypophosphatemia was observed (median serum phosphate changed from 3.4 [3.0-3.9] to 3.2 [2.7-3.8] mg/dL). Conclusions: In this real-world Japanese oncology setting where ESAs were not available for chemotherapy-induced anemia, high-dose IV iron monotherapy (FCM or FDI) was well tolerated and was associated with modest short-term Hb increases and a high observed rate of transfusion avoidance within a 21-45-day assessment window. These findings suggest that a proactive, TSAT-guided IV iron therapy approach may be a pragmatic option for selected patients; however, durability beyond 1 month, optimal re-dosing, and generalizability require confirmation in larger, longer prospective studies.

Keywords: cancer-related anemia; ferric carboxymaltose; ferric derisomaltose; functional iron deficiency; hypophosphatemia; intravenous iron; oncology; real-world evidence; supportive care; transfusion avoidance.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Change in hemoglobin (ΔHb) at ~1 month by iron status (non-transfused set). Box = interquartile range (IQR); center line = median; whiskers = 1.5 × IQR; outliers are points beyond the whiskers. “~1 month” denotes the latest Hb measured 21–45 days after iron.

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