4 results on '"Xu, Jessica Xu Hui"'
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2. Haemoglobin thresholds to define anaemia from age 6 months to 65 years:estimates from international data sources
- Author
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Braat, Sabine, Fielding, Katherine L., Han, Jiru, Jackson, Victoria E., Zaloumis, Sophie, Xu, Jessica Xu Hui, Moir-Meyer, Gemma, Blaauwendraad, Sophia M., Jaddoe, Vincent W.V., Gaillard, Romy, Parkin, Patricia C., Borkhoff, Cornelia M., Keown-Stoneman, Charles D.G., Birken, Catherine S., Maguire, Jonathon L., Bahlo, Melanie, Davidson, Eliza M., Pasricha, Sant Rayn, Braat, Sabine, Fielding, Katherine L., Han, Jiru, Jackson, Victoria E., Zaloumis, Sophie, Xu, Jessica Xu Hui, Moir-Meyer, Gemma, Blaauwendraad, Sophia M., Jaddoe, Vincent W.V., Gaillard, Romy, Parkin, Patricia C., Borkhoff, Cornelia M., Keown-Stoneman, Charles D.G., Birken, Catherine S., Maguire, Jonathon L., Bahlo, Melanie, Davidson, Eliza M., and Pasricha, Sant Rayn
- Abstract
Background: Detection of anaemia is crucial for clinical medicine and public health. Current WHO anaemia definitions are based on statistical thresholds (fifth centiles) set more than 50 years ago. We sought to establish evidence for the statistical haemoglobin thresholds for anaemia that can be applied globally and inform WHO and clinical guidelines. Methods: In this analysis we identified international data sources from populations in the USA, England, Australia, China, the Netherlands, Canada, Ecuador, and Bangladesh with sufficient clinical and laboratory information collected between 1998 and 2020 to obtain a healthy reference sample. Individuals with clinical or biochemical evidence of a condition that could reduce haemoglobin concentrations were excluded. We estimated haemoglobin thresholds (ie, 5th centiles) for children aged 6–23 months, 24–59 months, 5–11 years, and 12–17 years, and adults aged 18–65 years (including during pregnancy) for individual datasets and pooled across data sources. We also collated findings from three large-scale genetic studies to summarise genetic variants affecting haemoglobin concentrations in different ancestral populations. Findings: We identified eight data sources comprising 18 individual datasets that were eligible for inclusion in the analysis. In pooled analyses, the haemoglobin fifth centile was 104·4 g/L (90% CI 103·5–105·3) in 924 children aged 6–23 months, 110·2 g/L (109·5–110·9) in 1874 children aged 24–59 months, and 114·4 g/L (113·6–115·2) in 1839 children aged 5–11 years. Values diverged by sex in adolescents and adults. In pooled analyses, the fifth centile was 122·2 g/L (90% CI 121·3–123·1) in 1741 female adolescents aged 12–17 years and 128·2 g/L (126·4–130·0) in 1103 male adolescents aged 12–17 years. In pooled analyses of adults aged 18–65 years, the fifth centile was 119·7 g/L (90% CI 119·1–120·3) in 3640 non-pregnant females and 134·9 g/L (134·2–135·6) in 2377 males. Fifth centiles in pregnancy were 110
- Published
- 2024
3. Statistical haemoglobin thresholds to define anaemia across the lifecycle
- Author
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Braat, Sabine, Fielding, Katherine, Han, Jiru, Jackson, Victoria E., Zaloumis, Sophie, Xu, Jessica Xu Hui, Moir-Meyer, Gemma, Blaauwendraad, Sophia M., Jaddoe, Vincent W.V., Gaillard, Romy, Parkin, Patricia C., Borkhoff, Cornelia M., Keown-Stoneman, Charles D.G., Birken, Catherine S., Maguire, Jonathon L., Bahlo, Melanie, Davidson, Eliza, and Pasricha, Sant-Rayn
- Subjects
Article - Abstract
Detection of anaemia is critical for clinical medicine and public health. Current WHO values that define anaemia are statistical thresholds (5 (th) centile) set over 50 years ago, and are presently
- Published
- 2023
4. Statistical haemoglobin thresholds to define anaemia across the lifecycle.
- Author
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Braat S, Fielding K, Han J, Jackson VE, Zaloumis S, Xu JXH, Moir-Meyer G, Blaauwendraad SM, Jaddoe VWV, Gaillard R, Parkin PC, Borkhoff CM, Keown-Stoneman CDG, Birken CS, Maguire JL, Bahlo M, Davidson E, and Pasricha SR
- Abstract
Detection of anaemia is critical for clinical medicine and public health. Current WHO values that define anaemia are statistical thresholds (5
th centile) set over 50 years ago, and are presently <110g/L in children 6-59 months, <115g/L in children 5-11 years, <110g/L in pregnant women, <120g/L in children 12-14 years of age, <120g/L in non-pregnant women, and <130g/L in men. Haemoglobin is sensitive to iron and other nutrient deficiencies, medical illness and inflammation, and is impacted by genetic conditions; thus, careful exclusion of these conditions is crucial to obtain a healthy reference population. We identified data sources from which sufficient clinical and laboratory information was available to determine an apparently healthy reference sample. Individuals were excluded if they had any clinical or biochemical evidence of a condition that may diminish haemoglobin concentration. Discrete 5th centiles were estimated along with two-sided 90% confidence intervals and estimates combined using a fixed-effect approach. Estimates for the 5th centile of the healthy reference population in children were similar between sexes. Thresholds in children 6-23 months were 104.4g/L [90% CI 103.5, 105.3]; in children 24-59 months were 110.2g/L [109.5, 110.9]; and in children 5-11 years were 114.1g/L [113.2, 115.0]. Thresholds diverged by sex in adolescents and adults. In females and males 12-17 years, thresholds were 122.2g/L [121.3, 123.1] and 128.2 [126.4, 130.0], respectively. In adults 18-65 years, thresholds were 119.7g/L [119.1, 120.3] in non-pregnant females and 134.9g/L [134.2, 135.6] in males. Limited analyses indicated 5th centiles in first-trimester pregnancy of 110.3g/L [109.5, 111.0] and 105.9g/L [104.0, 107.7] in the second trimester. All thresholds were robust to variations in definitions and analysis models. Using multiple datasets comprising Asian, African, and European ancestries, we did not identify novel high prevalence genetic variants that influence haemoglobin concentration, other than variants in genes known to cause important clinical disease, suggesting non-clinical genetic factors do not influence the 5th centile between ancestries. Our results directly inform WHO guideline development and provide a platform for global harmonisation of laboratory, clinical and public health haemoglobin thresholds.- Published
- 2023
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