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Respiratory infections drive hepcidin-mediated blockade of iron absorption leading to iron deficiency anemia in African children

Authors :
Prentice, AM
Bah, A
Jallow, MW
Jallow, AT
Sanyang, S
Sise, EA
Ceesay, K
Danso, E
Armitage, AE
Pasricha, S-R
Drakesmith, H
Wathuo, M
Kessler, N
Cerami, C
Wegmuelleri, R
Prentice, AM
Bah, A
Jallow, MW
Jallow, AT
Sanyang, S
Sise, EA
Ceesay, K
Danso, E
Armitage, AE
Pasricha, S-R
Drakesmith, H
Wathuo, M
Kessler, N
Cerami, C
Wegmuelleri, R
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Iron deficiency anemia (IDA) is the most prevalent nutritional condition worldwide. We studied the contribution of hepcidin-mediated iron blockade to IDA in African children. We measured hepcidin and hemoglobin weekly, and hematological, inflammatory, and iron biomarkers at baseline, 7 weeks, and 12 weeks in 407 anemic (hemoglobin < 11 g/dl), otherwise healthy Gambian children (6 to 27 months). Each child maintained remarkably constant hepcidin levels (P < 0.0001 for between-child variance), with half consistently maintaining levels that indicate physiological blockade of iron absorption. Hepcidin was strongly predicted by nurse-ascribed adverse events with dominant signals from respiratory infections and fevers (all P < 0.0001). Diarrhea and fecal calprotectin were not associated with hepcidin. In multivariate analysis, C-reactive protein was the dominant predictor of hepcidin and contributed to iron blockade even at very low levels. We conclude that even low-grade inflammation, especially associated with respiratory infections, contributes to IDA in African children.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315687826
Document Type :
Electronic Resource