Clark Martha A, Goheen Morgan M, Cerami Carla
Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Front Pharmacol. 2014 May 6;5:84. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2014.00084. eCollection 2014.
Iron deficiency affects one quarter of the world's population and causes significant morbidity, including detrimental effects on immune function and cognitive development. Accordingly, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends routine iron supplementation in children and adults in areas with a high prevalence of iron deficiency. However, a large body of clinical and epidemiological evidence has accumulated which clearly demonstrates that host iron deficiency is protective against falciparum malaria and that host iron supplementation may increase the risk of malaria. Although many effective antimalarial treatments and preventive measures are available, malaria remains a significant public health problem, in part because the mechanisms of malaria pathogenesis remain obscured by the complexity of the relationships that exist between parasite virulence factors, host susceptibility traits, and the immune responses that modulate disease. Here we review (i) the clinical and epidemiological data that describes the relationship between host iron status and malaria infection and (ii) the current understanding of the biological basis for these clinical and epidemiological observations.
缺铁影响着全球四分之一的人口,并导致严重的发病率,包括对免疫功能和认知发育的不利影响。因此,世界卫生组织(WHO)建议在缺铁高发地区对儿童和成人进行常规铁补充。然而,大量临床和流行病学证据已经积累起来,清楚地表明宿主缺铁对恶性疟疾具有保护作用,而宿主补充铁可能会增加患疟疾的风险。尽管有许多有效的抗疟治疗方法和预防措施,但疟疾仍然是一个重大的公共卫生问题,部分原因是疟疾发病机制仍因寄生虫毒力因子、宿主易感性特征以及调节疾病的免疫反应之间存在的复杂关系而模糊不清。在此,我们综述:(i)描述宿主铁状态与疟疾感染之间关系的临床和流行病学数据,以及(ii)对这些临床和流行病学观察结果生物学基础的当前认识。