Assongba Landry, Boukari Oumou, Alao Jules Maroufou, Nouwakpo Natacha, Vincent Jeanne Perpétue, Luty Adrian J F, Ter Kuile Feiko O, Massougbodji Achille, Hill Jenny, Briand Valérie, Accrombessi Manfred
Institut de Recherche Clinique du Bénin (IRCB), Abomey-Calavi, Benin.
National Institute for Health and Medical Research (INSERM) UMR 1219, Research Institute for Sustainable Development (IRD) EMR 271, Bordeaux Population Health Centre, University of Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France.
Sci Rep. 2025 Jul 1;15(1):21431. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-04298-5.
Severe anaemia is a critical public health issue worldwide, disproportionately affecting children in Africa, where approximately 40% of children aged 6 to 59 months are impacted. It leads to significant hospital and post-hospital complications. However, there is a notable lack of research on its burden and clinical impact, particularly in Benin, where existing data are outdated. This study aims to assess the prevalence and impact of severe anaemia in two areas of perennial transmission in southern Benin. We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study at two referral hospitals in Benin, Lagune Mother and Child University Hospital Centre (CHU-MEL) and the Departmental Hospital Centre-Zou (CHD-Z). Sociodemographic, clinical and biological information were extracted from medical records of patients admitted to paediatric ward in 2023, using a standardised questionnaire. Clinical severe anaemia was defined as anaemia with decompensation requiring blood transfusion, and biological severe anaemia as haemoglobin < 5 g/dl. A total of 7152 paediatric hospital records were included in the analysis (CHU-MEL = 4388; CHD-Z = 2764). The median (IQR, range) age was 32 (13-61; 1-228) months. Severe malaria (N = 3653/7152 [51.1%]) and clinical severe anaemia (3586/7152 [50.1%]) were the most common diagnoses with four out of five children (2836/3586 [79.0%]) clinically diagnosed with severe anaemia cases had malaria. In children with severe anaemia, the risk of death decreased slightly with year of age (aOR 0.95, 95% CI 0.92-0.99, p = 0.019). In contrast, severe malnutrition increased the risk of death (aOR 1.80, 95% CI 1.33-2.43, p < 0.001) being significant risk factors. Severe anaemia is a major contributor to paediatric hospital admissions, with severe malaria being a leading cause in these regions. This study highlights the critical need for a comprehensive management strategy for severe anaemia, particularly in the youngest children. An integrated strategy of effective malaria chemoprevention, such as post-discharge malaria chemotherapy combined with targeted nutritional interventions, are essential to mitigate mortality rates in areas with high malaria transmission, where the dual burden of malaria and nutritional deficiencies exacerbates paediatric morbidity and mortality.
严重贫血是一个全球性的关键公共卫生问题,对非洲儿童的影响尤为严重,在非洲,约40%的6至59个月大的儿童受到影响。它会导致严重的医院内和出院后并发症。然而,关于其负担和临床影响的研究明显不足,特别是在贝宁,现有数据已经过时。本研究旨在评估贝宁南部两个常年疟疾传播地区严重贫血的患病率及其影响。我们在贝宁的两家转诊医院——拉古纳母婴大学医院中心(CHU-MEL)和祖省医院中心(CHD-Z)开展了一项回顾性横断面研究。使用标准化问卷从2023年入住儿科病房的患者病历中提取社会人口统计学、临床和生物学信息。临床严重贫血定义为伴有失代偿需要输血的贫血,生物学严重贫血定义为血红蛋白<5g/dl。分析共纳入7152份儿科医院记录(CHU-MEL = 4388份;CHD-Z = 2764份)。年龄中位数(IQR,范围)为32(13 - 61;1 - 228)个月。严重疟疾(N = 3653/7152 [51.1%])和临床严重贫血(3586/7152 [50.1%])是最常见的诊断,五分之四临床诊断为严重贫血病例的儿童(2836/3586 [79.0%])患有疟疾。在严重贫血儿童中,死亡风险随年龄增长略有下降(调整后比值比0.95,95%置信区间0.92 - 0.99,p = 0.019)。相比之下,严重营养不良增加了死亡风险(调整后比值比1.80,95%置信区间1.33 - 2.43,p < 0.001),是显著的风险因素。严重贫血是儿科住院的主要原因,严重疟疾是这些地区的主要病因。本研究强调了对严重贫血制定全面管理策略的迫切需求,特别是针对最小的儿童。有效的疟疾化学预防综合策略,如出院后疟疾化疗结合有针对性的营养干预,对于降低疟疾高传播地区的死亡率至关重要,在这些地区,疟疾和营养缺乏的双重负担加剧了儿科发病率和死亡率。