| Literature DB >> 24834053 |
Martha A Clark1, Morgan M Goheen1, Carla Cerami2.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium falciparum; iron; iron deficiency anemia; iron supplementation; malaria
Year: 2014 PMID: 24834053 PMCID: PMC4018558 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2014.00084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Summary of clinical studies on iron deficiency, iron supplementation, and malaria.
| Sazawal et al., | Randomized placebo controlled | 7950 children given iron and folic acid | Zanzibar, intense malaria transmission | Trial stopped early because of safety concerns. Those who received iron and folic acid with or without zinc were 12% (95% CI 2–23, |
| 8120 children given iron, folic acid and zinc | ||||
| 8006 control children | ||||
| Ages 1–35 months | ||||
| Tielsch et al., | Randomized placebo controlled | 8337 children given iron and folic acid | Nepal, no malaria | Daily supplementation of young children in southern Nepal with iron and folic acid with or without zinc had no effect on their risk of death, but might protect against diarrhea, dysentery, and acute respiratory illness |
| 9230 children given iron, folic acid and zinc | ||||
| 8683 control children | ||||
| Ages 1–36 months | ||||
| Veenemans et al., | 2 × 2 Factorial trial | 145 children given zinc only | Tanzania, intense malaria transmission | When data was analyzed by iron status at baseline, multi-nutrient supplementation increased the overall number of malaria episodes in children with iron deficiency by 41%, whereas multi-nutrient supplementation had no effect on the number of malaria episodes among children who were iron-replete at baseline |
| 148 children given both zinc and multi-nutrients (including iron) | ||||
| 146 children given multi-nutrients (including iron) without zinc | ||||
| 148 children given placebo | ||||
| Ages 6–60 months | ||||
| Zlotkin et al., | Cluster randomized, double blind | 967 children given micronutrient powder with iron | Ghana, intense malaria transmission | Malaria incidence was significantly lower in the iron group compared with the no iron group during the intervention period (risk ratio [RR], 0.87; 95% CI, 0.78–0.96). In secondary analyses, these differences were no longer statistically significant after adjusting for baseline iron deficiency and anemia status overall (RR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.75–1.01) |
| 991 children given micronutrient powder without iron | Insecticide treated bednets provided at enrollment | |||
| Ages 6–35 months | ||||
| Subgroup analysis of 704 children who had anemia at baseline and for whom additional blood samples were obtained at the end of the intervention period found only a small mean increase in hemoglobin in the iron group (mean change of 0.08 g/dL measured), indicating that the micronutrient powder had limited efficacy in this trial | ||||
| Esan et al., | 2-arm, double-blind, randomized | 100 children received multivitamins plus iron | Malawi, intense malaria transmission | Children who received iron had a better CD4 percentage response at 3 months, but an increased incidence of malaria at 6 months (incidence rate, 120.2 vs. 71.7; adjusted incidence rate ratio [aIRR], 1.81 [95% CI, 1.04–3.16]; |
| 96 children received multivitamins alone | ||||
| HIV infected children aged 6–59 months with moderate anemia (Hgb = 7.0–9.9 g/dL); 3 months of treatment, 6 months follow up | ||||
| Nyakeriga et al., | 2 Cross sectional studies | Study 1: | Kenya, intense malaria transmission | Incidence of clinical malaria was significantly lower among children with iron deficiency anemia (incidence-rate ratio [IRR], 0.70; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.51–0.99; |
| Iron replete ( | ||||
| Iron deficient ( | ||||
| Study 2: | ||||
| Iron replete ( | ||||
| Iron deficient ( | ||||
| Ages 8 months-8 years | ||||
| Gwamaka et al., | Longitudinal | 785 children monitored for 3 years | Tanzania, intense malaria transmission | Iron deficiency anemia at routine, well-child visits significantly decreased the odds of subsequent parasitemia (23% decrease, |
| Jonker et al., | Longitudinal | 727 children monitored for 1 year | Malawi, intense malaria transmission | Children with iron deficiency anemia at baseline had a lower incidence of malaria parasitemia and clinical malaria during a year of follow-up; adjusted hazard ratios 0.55 (95% CI:0.41–0.74) and 0.49 (95% CI:0.33–0.73), respectively |
| Kabyemela et al., | Cross sectional | 445 pregnant women (120 primigravidae, 112 secundigravidae, and 213 multigravidae) | Tanzania, intense malaria transmission | Iron deficiency decreased the risk of placental malaria |
| Senga et al., | Case-Control | Pregnant women (112 cases with placental malaria, 110 controls with no evidence of placental infection) | Malawi, intense malaria transmission | Iron deficiency decreased risk of acute, chronic and past placental malaria. The association was greater in the multigravidae group |
Figure 1Host Iron available to erythrocytic stage . Host iron immediately available to the erythrocytic stage of P. falciparum include serum and intra-erythrocytic iron. Serum iron ranges from 10 to 27 μM. Transferrin bound iron is the predominant form of iron in the serum, though trace amounts of non-transferrin bound iron (NTBI) are present. In some pathologic conditions such as hemochromatosis, NTBI may be significantly greater. While iron deficiency anemia is characterized by a significant decline in serum iron. RBC iron is found within hemoglobin (20 mM), ferritin (0.7 nM), and as bioavailable iron (1–10 μM). Iron deficiency anemia significantly reduces RBC iron, specifically hemoglobin iron. Shown in the figure are: Pf, P. falciparum; DV, digestive vacuole; N, parasite nucleus; and EC, endothelial cell.
Relationship between host serum iron and .
| Pollack and Fleming, | - pRBCs take up more iron from transferrin than uninfected RBCs |
| Rodriguez and Jungery, | - FITC labeled holo-transferrin traverses from the pRBC surface to the parasitophorous vacuole - Internalization of holo-transferrin is most active in early trophozoite stage pRBCs - A 93 kD parasite protein inserted into the RBC membrane binds human holo-transferrin |
| Haldar et al., | - A 102kD schizont stage parasite protein inserted into the RBC membrane binds human holo-transferrin |
| Pollack and Schnelle, | - Twice as much human holo-transferrin associates with pRBCs than uninfected RBCs - Human holo-transferrin binding to pRBCs is non-specific |
| Fry, | - RBC membranes of pRBCs possess diferric transferrin reductase activity, uninfected RBC membranes do not - pRBC diferric transferrin reductase activity increases as the parasite matures from the ring to trophozoite stage |
| Surolia and Misquith, | - Human transferrin conjugated to the toxin gelonin selectively binds trophozoite stage pRBCs - Toxicity of gelonin to erythrocytic stage |
| Clark et al., | - Addition of holo-transferrin to trophozoite stage pRBCs increases the bioavailable iron content of pRBCs but not uninfected RBCs |
| Peto and Thompson, | - pRBCs do not acquire iron from holo-transferrin - Depletion of iron from - Addition of iron to |
| Scott et al., | - Restriction of iron chelator DFO to |
| Sanchez-Lopez and Haldar, | - pRBCs do not take up iron from human holo-transferrin - Depletion of human transferrin from culture media does not affect erythrocytic stage parasite growth |
| Peto and Thompson, | - pRBCs take up NTBI |
| Sanchez-Lopez and Haldar, | - pRBCs take up of free, non-transferrin bound iron (NTBI), but not any more than uninfected RBCs - pRBC NTBI acquisition is time, concentration, and temperature but not energy dependent |
| Clark et al., | - Addition of ferric citrate (NTBI) to trophozoite stage pRBCs increases the bioavailable iron content of pRBCs but not uinfected RBCs |
Relationship between RBC iron and .
| Rudzinska et al., | - - |
| Okada, | - |
| Sigala et al., | - |
| Loria et al., | - Hydrogen peroxide degrades host heme under conditions that are analogous to the microenvironment of the parasite food vacuole |
Figure 2Hypothesized impact of iron deficiency anemia and iron supplementation on . Iron deficiency anemia and iron supplementation each profoundly influence human erythropoiesis, and this may influence erythrocytic stage malaria infection. Iron deficiency induced reduction in the erythropoietic rate and synthesis of microcytic iron deficient RBCs may provide protection against P. falciparum infection. Conversely, stimulation of the human host's erythropoietic rate by iron supplementation and subsequent replacement of microcytic iron deficient RBCs with young iron-replete RBCs may increase an individual's risk of erythrocytic stage P. falciparum infection.
Questions for future translational research.
| How does the malaria parasite regulate iron? |
| What host iron sources are utilized by the malaria parasite? |
| Does the malaria parasite store iron? |
| Are parasite virulence factors regulated by iron? |
| Can merozoites sense host intra-erythrocytic iron? |
| Is iron limited enough during iron deficiency or in such excess following iron supplementation to respectively inhibit and exacerbate erythrocytic stage |
| Do iron deficiency and iron supplementation affect erythrocytic stage |
| Do iron deficiency or iron supplementation impact parasite |
| Are there specific strains of |
| What is the effect of host iron deficiency and iron supplementation on |
| What are the effects of changing RBC population dynamics on malaria infection? |
| How are the host innate and adaptive immune responses to malaria affected by iron deficiency and iron supplementation? |
| Is anemia of inflammation protective against malaria? |
| How does the presence of iron deficiency anemia modify the effects of HbS, HbC, or HbE on parasite growth, maturation, microvascular adhesion, or endothelial cell activation? |
| How do other malaria-protective polymorphisms, such as type O blood group antigen and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, interact with iron deficiency in mitigating malaria pathogenesis? |