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Clinical Trial Summary

Blood donors who have a low fingerstick hemoglobin level are usually deferred from donating. A possible solution to the problem of repeated deferrals might be for Blood Banks to offer donors with low hemoglobin levels oral iron supplements. To determine the feasibility of such a program, this study will:

- Determine the frequency of iron deficiency in first-time and repeat blood donors

- Examine the effects of long-term blood donation on donor hemoglobin levels and iron stores

- Compare body iron stores in donors who have low hemoglobin values with that of donors who have acceptable hemoglobin values at the time of donation

- Determine what conditions other than iron deficiency lead to low hemoglobin levels in blood donors

- Determine the safety and effectiveness of giving oral iron tablets to donors with low hemoglobin levels

- Monitor the effect of oral iron administration on donor satisfaction and donor retention.

First-time and repeat blood donors at the NIH Clinical Center Blood Bank 18 years of age and older may be eligible for this study. Participants include prospective donors who have an acceptable hemoglobin value at the time of donation and those whose hemoglobin level is determined to be too low for donation.

All participants do the following:

- Answer medical questions about their diet, health, and family history of blood disorders.

- Have blood samples drawn from their arm for testing blood cell counts, iron stores, and other hemoglobin-related tests as appropriate.

Donors with low hemoglobin also:

- Take iron supplements (ferrous sulfate) to replenish iron stores. (Donors who have previously had unpleasant side effects from ferrous sulfate are offered ferrous gluconate as an alternative.)

- Undergo evaluation with medical screening and laboratory tests at the time of future blood donations.


Clinical Trial Description

Iron is an essential element that is lost with each blood donation. In order for a donor to compensate for the iron lost in donating blood, iron is mobilized from the body's iron stores and absorption of iron from the diet is increased. However, this balance is often difficult to maintain in premenopausal women and regular blood donors since there is ongoing blood loss. Deficiency in iron results in reduced hemoglobin values, iron stores, and eventually iron deficiency anemia if not treated. Iron deficiency presents a problem in blood centers since the minimum allowable hemoglobin for blood donation is 12.5 g per dL.

In the Department of Transfusion Medicine at the NIH, 14.6% of donors presenting for whole blood donation and 7.7% of donors presenting for apheresis platelet donation are deferred on at least one occasion per year due to low hemoglobin values. Overall, 7.9% of visits for whole blood donation and 2.1% of visits for apheresis platelet donation result in donor deferral due to low hemoglobin. Although the challenge of iron depletion in the blood donor population has been known for decades, little has been undertaken to resolve this issue. Several authors have reported data from successful short term projects demonstrating the safety and efficacy of iron replacement in donors, but larger long term studies have not been reported.

The objectives of this protocol are to: (1) quantitate the prevalence of iron deficiency in first-time presumably healthy individuals who present for blood donation; (2) study the effects of long-term blood donation on donors' hemoglobin levels and iron stores; (3) evaluate the safety, practicality, and efficacy of distributing oral replacement iron to blood donors; (4) determine the effect of oral iron replacement therapy on the donor pool by monitoring deferral rates for low hemoglobin before and after the initiation of an iron replacement program. The goal of these objectives is to treat and prevent iron deficiency in prospective and regular blood donors, thereby expanding the eligible donor pool and leading to increased donor satisfaction and retention by decreasing deferral rates due to low hemoglobin. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00327067
Study type Observational
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date May 12, 2006
Completion date March 1, 2012

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