# Myocardial Performance Improvement After Iron Replacement in Heart Failure Patients: The IRON-PATH II Echo-Substudy

**Authors:** Raúl Ramos-Polo, Maria del Mar Ras-Jiménez, María del Carmen Basalo Carbajales, Sílvia Jovells-Vaqué, José Manuel Garcia-Pinilla, Marta Cobo-Marcos, Javier de Juan-Bagudá, Cândida Fonseca, Josep Francesch Manzano, Andreea Eunice Cosa, Sergi Yun-Viladomat, Cristina Enjuanes, Marta Tajes Orduña, Josep Comin-Colet

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14124048 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2025-06-07

## TL;DR

This study shows that heart failure patients with iron deficiency have worse heart function, but this improves after iron treatment.

## Contribution

Demonstrates reversibility of myocardial dysfunction in heart failure patients after iron repletion using advanced echocardiographic parameters.

## Key findings

- Iron-deficient heart failure patients had worse LV and RV myocardial performance compared to non-deficient patients.
- Iron repletion improved LV and RV function, aligning with non-deficient patients.
- Echocardiographic parameters like GLS, MW, and WE showed significant improvement after iron treatment.

## Abstract

Background: Iron deficiency (ID) is a commonly seen comorbidity in heart failure (HF) patients. It is often associated with a poor prognosis and impaired physical capacity. The functional limitations linked to ID may lead to cardiac function abnormalities. The functional limitations linked to ID may lead to cardiac function abnormalities, that can be reversible after iron repletion. Some echocardiographic parameters, such as global longitudinal strain (GLS), myocardial work (MW) and its derivatives constructive work (CW), wasted work (WW) and work efficiency (WE), may be of added value in advanced cardiac performance assessment. Methods: IRON-PATH II was a multicenter, prospective and observational study designed to describe the pathophysiological pathways associated with ID. The echo-substudy included 100 HF patients that had undergone a specific pilot echocardiographic evaluation. Patients had a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) ≤50%, were in stable clinical condition and on standard HF medication with hemoglobin ≥11 g/dL. The final cohort included 98 patients. Results: The ID group showed worse cardiac function, with lower GLS (−8.5 ± 9% vs. −10 ± 10%), WE (74 ± 10% vs. 80 ± 10%) and MW (665 [453–1013] vs. 947 [542–1199] mmHg%), as well as higher WW (290 [228–384] vs. 212 [138–305] mmHg%) and lower RV free wall strain (−13 [−20–(−11)]% vs. −17 [−23–(−14)]%). Following iron repletion, ID patients demonstrated improved LV (GLS, MW, WE and WW) and RV performance (RV free wall strain), aligning with non-ID patients (all p-values >0.05 compared to the non-ID group). Conclusions: Among HF patients with reduced LVEF, ID was associated with worse myocardial performance in both the LV and RV. All the alterations seen were reversible after intravenous iron repletion.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** heart failure (MONDO:0005252)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ID (MESH:D000090463), HF (MESH:D006333), cardiac function abnormalities (MESH:D000014)
- **Chemicals:** IRON (MESH:D007501)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

37 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12193777/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12193777