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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02498886
Other study ID # 1422
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Early Phase 1
First received July 13, 2015
Last updated February 3, 2017
Start date August 2015
Est. completion date March 2016

Study information

Verified date February 2017
Source Medical Research Council
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

At MRC Human Nutrition Research, the investigators have developed an engineered analogue of the ferritin-core for safe and effective iron supplementation. Iron hydroxide adipate tartrate (IHAT) is a tartrate-modified, nano-disperse Fe(III) oxo-hydroxide, formed in an adipate buffer, with similar functional properties and small primary particle size (~2 nm) as the iron found in the ferritin core; it better mimics iron absorption from food than the non-physiological bolus doses of ferrous sulphate currently used.

This exploratory study will test the hypothesis that IHAT has equivalent bioavailability to ferrous sulphate but produces a less harmful post-ingestion rise in transferrin saturation. The design is a 3-arm (IDA, non-IDA and IDA-IHAT new manufacture), crossover, randomised, single-dose study.

Primary endpoint:

Relative bioavailability value of IHAT versus ferrous sulphate. This will be determined from the red blood cell incorporation of isotope-labelled iron 14 days following a single oral dose.

Secondary endpoints:

Serum iron at 0, 2, 4, 6 hours following a single dose of each iron compound. Transferrin saturation at 0, 2, 4, 6 hours following a single dose of each iron compound.

Plasma 58Fe and 57Fe at 0, 2, 4, 6 hours. Pathogen growth using ex vivo assays in serum collected from each subject at 0, 2, 4 and 6 hours following a single dose.


Description:

The study's main hypothesis is that IHAT will be bioavailable in pre-menopausal anaemic Gambian women and will lead to a lower serum iron and transferrin saturation increase than an equivalent dose of ferrous sulphate. Furthermore, the investigators hypothesize that IHAT will produce a less harmful post-ingestion rise in transferrin saturation, i.e. the serum collected from subjects following a single dose of IHAT will promote less pathogen growth in ex vivo assays than that collected following an equivalent dose of ferrous sulphate. Finally, based on previous animal data [5], the investigators hypothesize that IHAT absorption will be significantly higher in anaemic women compared to non-anaemic women, and that this will not be the case with ferrous sulphate.

This study is a cross-over, single-dose comparison against ferrous sulphate (standard of care) in anaemic and non-anaemic women. The iron single dosage for both compounds will be 60mg elemental iron equivalent and each compound will be labelled with a stable iron isotope. Outcomes will be: red blood cell incorporation of labelled iron, serum iron, transferrin saturation and pathogen growth in ex vivo serum assays.

Primary objective:

To determine iron bioavailability (i.e. red blood cell incorporation) from a single dose of IHAT versus ferrous sulphate in pre-menopausal Gambian women.

Secondary objective:

To determine serum iron absorption following a single dose of IHAT versus ferrous sulphate in pre-menopausal Gambian women.

To evaluate if a single-dose of IHAT produces a less harmful post-ingestion rise in transferrin saturation and serum iron than ferrous sulphate.

Each compound is labelled with a stable isotope of Fe so that its absorption can be determined from the red blood cell incorporation of the stable isotope 14 days after the single dose. This study is effectively a Phase 0 study (pharmacokinetics) with small numbers and because iron absorption varies from individual to individual, depending on their body iron needs and gastrointestinal digestion issues, it is more accurate to use each study subject as her own control. Therefore, each subject will ingest IHAT on one study day and the active treatment comparator on a separate day. The 2 study visits need to be 14 days apart to allow for red blood cell incorporation of the stable iron isotopes used to label the iron materials. This method is the gold standard to determine relative bioavailability values (RBV) of novel iron compounds (i.e. in relation to ferrous sulphate absorption) and allows an accurate determination of RBV of IHAT that otherwise would not be possible if we used a parallel study design with small numbers.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 34
Est. completion date March 2016
Est. primary completion date March 2016
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender Female
Age group 18 Years to 45 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Pre-menopausal women apparently healthy (as judged by a study nurse at the screening day) with normal CRP (measured at screening).

- Non-pregnant (will be tested with a rapid pregnancy test) and non-lactating women.

- IDA arm: 9=Hb=11 g/dL and ferritin= 15 ng/ml

- Non-IDA arm: Hb>11 g/dL and ferritin> 15 ng/ml.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Malaria and other infections

- Severe anaemia (Hb<9 g/dL)

- CRP> 5 mg/L

- Chronic disease

- Currently participating in other iron intervention studies.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Dietary Supplement:
IHAT
Iron hydroxide adipate tartrate (IHAT): Single dose capsule containing IHAT equivalent to 60mg iron with 2 mg isotopically enriched with 58Fe.
Ferrous sulphate
Ferrous sulphate: Single dose capsule containing ferrous sulphate heptahydrate equivalent to 60 mg iron with 10 mg isotopically enriched with 57Fe.

Locations

Country Name City State
Gambia MRC Unit The Gambia Keneba West Kiang

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Medical Research Council

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Gambia, 

References & Publications (3)

Aslam MF, Frazer DM, Faria N, Bruggraber SF, Wilkins SJ, Mirciov C, Powell JJ, Anderson GJ, Pereira DI. Ferroportin mediates the intestinal absorption of iron from a nanoparticulate ferritin core mimetic in mice. FASEB J. 2014 Aug;28(8):3671-8. doi: 10.1096/fj.14-251520. — View Citation

Pereira DI, Bruggraber SF, Faria N, Poots LK, Tagmount MA, Aslam MF, Frazer DM, Vulpe CD, Anderson GJ, Powell JJ. Nanoparticulate iron(III) oxo-hydroxide delivers safe iron that is well absorbed and utilised in humans. Nanomedicine. 2014 Nov;10(8):1877-86. doi: 10.1016/j.nano.2014.06.012. — View Citation

Powell JJ, Bruggraber SF, Faria N, Poots LK, Hondow N, Pennycook TJ, Latunde-Dada GO, Simpson RJ, Brown AP, Pereira DI. A nano-disperse ferritin-core mimetic that efficiently corrects anemia without luminal iron redox activity. Nanomedicine. 2014 Oct;10(7):1529-38. doi: 10.1016/j.nano.2013.12.011. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Relative bioavailability value of IHAT versus ferrous sulphate This will be determined from the red blood cell incorporation of isotope-labelled iron 14 days following a single oral dose. 14 days
Secondary Serum iron Serum iron will be determined at 0, 2, 4, 6 hours following a single dose of each iron compounds (i.e. on days 1 and 14). 6 hours
Secondary Transferrin saturation Tsat will be determined at 0, 2, 4, 6 hours following a single dose of each iron compounds (i.e. on days 1 and 14). 6 hours
Secondary Pathogen Growth Pathogen growth will be determined using ex vivo assays in serum collected from each subject at 0, 2, 4 and 6 hours following a single dose of each compound (days 1 and 14). 6 hours
Secondary Plasma iron Plasma 58Fe and 57Fe will be determined at 0, 2, 4, 6 hours (on days 1 and 14). 6 hours
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