Sanquin Research and Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Sanquin Research and Amsterdam UMC, location VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherland.
Haematologica. 2020 Oct 1;105(10):2400-2406. doi: 10.3324/haematol.2019.229450.
Whole blood donors, especially frequently donating donors, have a risk of iron deficiency and low hemoglobin levels, which may affect their health and eligibility to donate. Lifestyle behaviors, such as dietary iron intake and physical activity, may influence iron stores and thereby hemoglobin levels. We aimed to investigate whether dietary iron intake and questionnaire-based moderate-to-vigorous physical activity were associated with hemoglobin levels, and whether ferritin levels mediated these associations. In Donor InSight-III, a Dutch cohort study of blood and plasma donors, data on heme and non-heme iron intake (mg/day), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (10 minutes/day), hemoglobin levels (mmol/L) and ferritin levels (μg/L) were available in 2,323 donors (1,074 male). Donors with higher heme iron intakes (regression coefficients (β) in men and women: 0.160 and 0.065 mmol/L higher hemoglobin per 1 mg of heme iron, respectively) and lower non-heme iron intakes (β: -0.014 and -0.017, respectively) had higher hemoglobin levels, adjusted for relevant confounders. Ferritin levels mediated these associations (indirect effect (95% confidence interval) in men and women respectively: 0.074 (0.045; 0.111) and 0.061 (0.030; 0.096) for heme and -0.003 (-0.008;0.001) and -0.008 (-0.013;-0.003) for non-heme). Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity was negatively associated with hemoglobin levels in men only (β: -0.005), but not mediated by ferritin levels. In conclusion, higher heme and lower non-heme iron intake were associated with higher hemoglobin levels in donors, via higher ferritin levels. This indicates that donors with high heme iron intake may be more capable of maintaining iron stores to recover hemoglobin levels after blood donation.
全血捐献者,尤其是频繁献血者,存在缺铁和低血红蛋白水平的风险,这可能影响他们的健康和献血资格。生活方式行为,如饮食中铁的摄入和身体活动,可能会影响铁储存量,从而影响血红蛋白水平。我们旨在研究饮食中铁的摄入和基于问卷的中等到剧烈的身体活动是否与血红蛋白水平相关,以及铁蛋白水平是否介导这些关联。在 Donor InSight-III 中,这是一项针对血液和血浆捐献者的荷兰队列研究,在 2323 名捐献者(1074 名男性)中获得了血红素和非血红素铁摄入(mg/天)、中等到剧烈的身体活动(10 分钟/天)、血红蛋白水平(mmol/L)和铁蛋白水平(μg/L)的数据。血红素铁摄入量较高的(男性和女性的回归系数(β):血红素铁每增加 1mg,血红蛋白分别升高 0.160 和 0.065mmol/L)和非血红素铁摄入量较低的(β:-0.014 和 -0.017,分别)有较高的血红蛋白水平,调整了相关混杂因素。铁蛋白水平介导了这些关联(男性和女性的间接效应(95%置信区间)分别为:0.074(0.045;0.111)和 0.061(0.030;0.096),血红素和-0.003(-0.008;0.001)和-0.008(-0.013;-0.003),非血红素)。只有男性的中等到剧烈的身体活动与血红蛋白水平呈负相关(β:-0.005),但铁蛋白水平并未介导这一关联。总之,较高的血红素和较低的非血红素铁摄入与供体的血红蛋白水平升高相关,这是通过较高的铁蛋白水平介导的。这表明,血红素铁摄入较高的供体可能更有能力在献血后维持铁储存以恢复血红蛋白水平。