Kulkarni Bharati, Peter Rajini, Ghosh Santu, Pullakhandam Raghu, Thomas Tinku, Reddy G Bhanuprakash, Rajkumar Hemalatha, Kapil Umesh, Deb Sila, Johnston Robert, Agrawal Praween K, De Wagt Arjan, Kurpad Anura V, Sachdev Harshpal Singh
ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India.
St. John's Medical College, Bangalore, India.
J Nutr. 2021 Aug 7;151(8):2422-2434. doi: 10.1093/jn/nxab145.
Anemia control programs in India focus mainly on the measurement of hemoglobin in response to iron-folic acid supplementation. However, representative national estimates of iron deficiency (ID) are not available.
The objective of the present study was to evaluate ID prevalence among children and adolescents (1-19 y) using nationally representative data and to examine the sociodemographic patterning of ID.
Cross-sectional data from the Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey in children (1-4 y: n = 9635; 5-9 y: n = 11,938) and adolescents (10-19 y; n = 11,507) on serum ferritin (SF) and other biomarkers were analyzed to determine inflammation-adjusted ID prevalence [SF (μg/L): <12 in 1-4 y and <15 in 5-19 y] and its relation to sociodemographic indicators. Multiple-regression analyses were conducted to identify the exposure associations of iron status. In addition, the relation between SF and hemoglobin was assessed as an indicator of iron utilization in different wealth quintiles.
ID prevalence was higher in 1- to 4-y-old children (31.9%; 95% CI: 31.0%, 32.8%) and adolescent girls (30.4%; 95% CI: 29.3%, 31.5%) but lower in adolescent boys and 5- to 9-y-old children (11%-15%). In all age groups, ID prevalence was higher in urban than in rural participants (1-4 y: 41% compared with 29%) and in those from richer quintiles (1-4 y: 44% in richest compared with 22% in poorest), despite adjustment for relevant confounders. SF significantly interacted with the wealth index, with declining trends in the strength of association between hemoglobin and SF from the richest to the poorest groups suggesting impaired iron utilization for hemoglobin synthesis in poorer wealth quintiles.
ID prevalence was indicative of moderate (in preschool children and adolescent girls) or mild (in 5- to 9-y-old children and adolescent boys) public health problem with significant variation by state and age. Focusing on increasing iron intake alone, without addressing the multiple environmental constraints related to poverty, may not result in intended benefits.
印度的贫血控制项目主要侧重于测量血红蛋白,以应对铁-叶酸补充剂的使用情况。然而,目前尚无具有代表性的全国缺铁(ID)估计数据。
本研究的目的是利用具有全国代表性的数据评估儿童和青少年(1 - 19岁)的缺铁患病率,并研究缺铁的社会人口学模式。
分析了来自全国儿童综合营养调查(1 - 4岁:n = 9635;5 - 9岁:n = 11938)和青少年(10 - 19岁;n = 11507)的血清铁蛋白(SF)及其他生物标志物的横断面数据,以确定经炎症调整后的缺铁患病率[SF(μg/L):1 - 4岁<12,5 - 19岁<15]及其与社会人口学指标的关系。进行多元回归分析以确定铁状态的暴露关联。此外,评估了不同财富五分位数中SF与血红蛋白之间的关系,作为铁利用的指标。
1 - 4岁儿童(31.9%;95%CI:31.0%,32.8%)和青春期女孩(30.4%;95%CI:29.3%,31.5%)的缺铁患病率较高,而青春期男孩和5 - 9岁儿童的患病率较低(11% - 15%)。在所有年龄组中,尽管对相关混杂因素进行了调整,但城市参与者的缺铁患病率高于农村参与者(1 - 4岁:41%对29%),且富裕五分位数人群的患病率高于贫困五分位数人群(1 - 4岁:最富裕组为44%,最贫困组为22%)。SF与财富指数有显著交互作用,从最富裕组到最贫困组,血红蛋白与SF之间关联强度呈下降趋势,表明贫困财富五分位数人群中用于血红蛋白合成的铁利用受损。
缺铁患病率表明存在中度(学龄前儿童和青春期女孩)或轻度(5 - 9岁儿童和青春期男孩)的公共卫生问题,且因州和年龄存在显著差异。仅关注增加铁摄入量,而不解决与贫困相关的多种环境限制因素,可能无法带来预期的益处。