| Literature DB >> 27336004 |
Emma Wikholm1, Petter Malmborg2, Maria Forssberg1, Carl-Axel Hederos1, Sverre Wikström3.
Abstract
The aim was to study prevalence of iron deficiency in children with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) during remission. In addition, there was an observational evaluation of hematological response to oral iron. A population-based retrospective study including 90 Swedish children (median 13 years) with IBD was performed. Patient records covered in median 25 months. Iron deficiency was present in 70/77 children (91%) in which iron status could be assessed. In clinical and biochemical remission, iron deficiency was found in 57/67 (85%) of children, and 23 (34%) of them had iron deficiency anemia. Thirty-six iron-deficient children were prescribed oral iron supplementation and 32 (89%) improved hemoglobin levels over 6 months. In conclusion, iron deficiency is common during clinical remission in children with IBD, even in cohorts with low prevalence of anemia. Therefore, regular biochemical screening for iron deficiency is warranted during all stages of disease, irrespective of symptoms and inflammatory blood markers.Entities:
Keywords: anemia; children; inflammatory bowel disease; iron deficiency; iron supplementation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27336004 PMCID: PMC4905151 DOI: 10.1177/2333794X16633672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Pediatr Health ISSN: 2333-794X
Basal Data on the 90 Children in the Study Group[a].
| Basal Descriptive Data | Medication During Study Period | n | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD/UC/IBDU (n) | 28/45/17 | 5-ASA monotherapy | 38 |
| Male/female (n) | 43/47 | Combination including AZA or MTX | 37 |
| Age at diagnosis (years) | 13 (10-15) | Combination including anti-TNF | 8 |
| Duration from diagnosis to first visit within the study period (months) | 13 (8-36) | Combination including surgery | 7 |
| Study duration included (months) | 26 (14-38) |
Abbreviations: CD, Crohn disease; UC, ulcerative colitis; IBDU, inflammatory bowel disease, type unclassified; 5-ASA, aminosalicylate; AZA, azathioprine; MTX, methotrexate; anti-TNF, anti–tumor necrosis factor.
Values are presented as median (interquartile range).
Figure 1.Iron deficiency and anemia in the cohort.
Of the 90 patients, 70 (78%) met criteria of iron deficiency during the study period. This corresponds to a period prevalence of 78% in the total study group and of 91% in the 77 children whose iron status was ever analyzed during the study period. Forty (44%) of the 90 patients met criteria of anemia during the study period. At first follow-up visit in remission, 57 patients (63%) met criteria of iron deficiency, and 30 patients (33%) were considered anemic.
Period and Point Prevalence of Iron Deficiency[a].
| CD | UC | IBDU | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iron deficiency during study period | 25/27 (93%) | 35/40 (88%) | 10/10 (100%) | NS |
| Iron deficiency at first follow-up | 22/24 (92%) | 28/34 (82%) | 7/9 (78%) | NS |
Abbreviations: CD, Crohn disease; UC, ulcerative colitis; IBDU, inflammatory bowel disease, type unclassified; NS, not significant.
Data are prevalence during the study period and at first follow-up visit in remission, respectively, in children with available iron status. Groups according to specific IBD diagnosis and P value for difference between groups.