| Literature DB >> 29070567 |
Parminder S Suchdev1,2, Anne M Williams3, Zuguo Mei2, Rafael Flores-Ayala2, Sant-Rayn Pasricha4, Lisa M Rogers5, Sorrel Ml Namaste6.
Abstract
The determination of iron status is challenging when concomitant infection and inflammation are present because of confounding effects of the acute-phase response on the interpretation of most iron indicators. This review summarizes the effects of inflammation on indicators of iron status and assesses the impact of a regression analysis to adjust for inflammation on estimates of iron deficiency (ID) in low- and high-infection-burden settings. We overviewed cross-sectional data from 16 surveys for preschool children (PSC) (n = 29,765) and from 10 surveys for nonpregnant women of reproductive age (WRA) (n = 25,731) from the Biomarkers Reflecting the Inflammation and Nutritional Determinants of Anemia (BRINDA) project. Effects of C-reactive protein (CRP) and α1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) concentrations on estimates of ID according to serum ferritin (SF) (used generically to include plasma ferritin), soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR), and total body iron (TBI) were summarized in relation to infection burden (in the United States compared with other countries) and population group (PSC compared with WRA). Effects of the concentrations of CRP and AGP on SF, sTfR, and TBI were generally linear, especially in PSC. Overall, regression correction changed the estimated prevalence of ID in PSC by a median of +25 percentage points (pps) when SF concentrations were used, by -15 pps when sTfR concentrations were used, and by +14 pps when TBI was used; the estimated prevalence of ID in WRA changed by a median of +8 pps when SF concentrations were used, by -10 pps when sTfR concentrations were used, and by +3 pps when TBI was used. In the United States, inflammation correction was done only for CRP concentrations because AGP concentrations were not measured; regression correction for CRP concentrations increased the estimated prevalence of ID when SF concentrations were used by 3 pps in PSC and by 7 pps in WRA. The correction of iron-status indicators for inflammation with the use of regression correction appears to substantially change estimates of ID prevalence in low- and high-infection-burden countries. More research is needed to determine the validity of inflammation-corrected estimates, their dependence on the etiology of inflammation, and their applicability to individual iron-status assessment in clinical settings.Entities:
Keywords: infection; inflammation; iron status; preschool children; serum ferritin; soluble transferrin receptor; total-body iron stores; women of reproductive age
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29070567 PMCID: PMC5701714 DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.117.155937
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Clin Nutr ISSN: 0002-9165 Impact factor: 7.045
Approaches to adjust iron indicators for inflammation: the BRINDA project
| Approach | Method |
| Unadjusted | No adjustments for AGP, CRP, or both. |
| Exclusion | Exclude individuals from data set with CRP concentrations >5 mg/L, AGP concentrations >1 g/L, or both. |
| Calculate estimated prevalence of micronutrient deficiency with the use of remaining subsample. | |
| CF | Stratify data set into groups by inflammation status depending on data availability and MB |
| Calculate the CF (ratio of the MB values’ GM in the reference group to the respective inflammation group) for each categorization with the formula shown in | |
| Multiply the raw MB values by the appropriate group CF: | |
| RC | Run linear regression models. The outcome variable is the ln MB. Depending on available data, ln CRP and ln AGP (continuous) can be included in the model as explanatory variables.Extract slopes from explanatory variables and input into the RC formula shown in |
sTfR was adjusted for AGP but not for CRP per a biological rationale as described elsewhere (10). AGP, α1-acid glycoprotein; BRINDA, Biomarkers Reflecting Inflammation and Nutritional Determinants of Anemia; CF, correction factor; CRP, C-reactive protein; GM, geometric mean; MB, micronutrient biomarker; PSC, preschool children; RC, regression correction; ref, reference value; sTfR, soluble transferrin receptor; WRA, women of reproductive age; β1, CRP regression coefficient; β2, AGP regression coefficient.
Inflammation status groups—CRP: 1) no inflammation (CRP ≤5 mg/L) (ref); 2) inflammation (CRP >5 mg/L). AGP: 1) no inflammation (AGP ≤1 g/L) (ref); 2) inflammation (AGP >1 g/L). CRP and AGP: 1) no inflammation (CRP ≤5 mg/L and AGP ≤1 g/L) (ref); 2) incubation (CRP >5 mg/L and AGP ≤1 g/L); 3) early convalescence (CRP >5 mg/L and AGP >1 g/L); 4) late convalescence (CRP ≤5 mg/L and AGP >1 g/L).
FIGURE 1Prevalence of inflammation in PSC and WRA: the BRINDA project. Countries are ordered from lowest to highest inflammation on the basis of elevated CRP in PSC. AGP, α1-acid glycoprotein; BRINDA, Biomarkers Reflecting Inflammation and Nutrition Determinants of Anemia; CRP, C-reactive protein; PNG, Papua New Guinea; PSC, preschool children; WRA, nonpregnant women of reproductive age. Figured created from data presented in Merrill et al. (28) with permission.
FIGURE 2Pooled estimated (95% CI) ID in preschool children according to ferritin and sTfR concentrations and TBI by CRP decile: the BRINDA project. The analysis was restricted to countries that measured both CRP and α1-acid glycoprotein; cutoffs to define estimated ID were as follows: ferritin concentration <12 μg/L, sTfR concentration >8.3, and TBI <0. The bold vertical line indicates the commonly used cutoff for CRP. BRINDA, Biomarkers Reflecting Inflammation and Nutrition Determinants of Anemia; CRP, C-reactive protein; ID, iron deficiency; sTfR, soluble transferrin receptor; TBI, total body iron. Adapted from Namaste et al. (30) with permission.
FIGURE 3Estimated (95% CI) ID according to low ferritin concentrations by CRP decile in NHANES preschool children and nonpregnant women of reproductive age. The bold vertical line indicates the commonly used cutoff for CRP. The small sample size in preschool children led to missing values at CRP deciles 3, 8, and 10. CRP, C-reactive protein; ID, iron deficiency.
Summary of changes in estimated ID by adjustment method with the use of pooled data in preschool children and nonpregnant women of reproductive age: the BRINDA project
| Approach | Percentage point difference | ||
| SF | sTfR | TBI | |
| Preschool children | |||
| Sample size (surveys), | 8413 (8) | 9281 (9) | 8413 (8) |
| Exclusion | +6.5 (2.6–15.4) | −6.5 (0.4–14.2) | +4.8 (1.7–12.9) |
| Correction factor | +6.5 (2.6–16.6) | −6.0 (0.7–12.4) | +3.6 (1.5–13.4) |
| Regression correction | +24.7 (8.1–35.6) | −14.6 (0.8–23.3) | +14.4 (4.1–25.9) |
| Nonpregnant women of reproductive age | |||
| Sample size (surveys), | 4258 (4) | 5004 (5) | 4258 (4) |
| Exclusion | +1.6 (1.1–3.0) | −1.9 (0.9–2.5) | +1.1 (1.0–2.7) |
| Correction factor | +1.6 (1.2–2.6) | −1.6 (0.9–2.7) | +1.0 (0.2–1.4) |
| Regression correction | +7.5 (4.1–10.7) | −9.5 (1.9–13.8) | +2.7 (0.9–5.6) |
Values are absolute medians (ranges), unless otherwise indicated. On the basis of data sets that had both CRP and AGP compared with no adjustment. Data were derived from Namaste et al. (26), Rohner et al. (27), and Mei et al. (25) with permission. AGP, α1-acid glycoprotein; BRINDA, Biomarkers Reflecting Inflammation and Nutrition Determinants of Anemia; CRP, C-reactive protein; ID, iron deficiency; SF, serum ferritin; sTfR, soluble transferrin receptor; TBI, total body iron.
Note that plasma ferritin was used in some surveys.
Excluded on the basis of a CRP concentration >5 mg/L or AGP concentration >1 g/L.
Excluded on the basis of an AGP concentration >1g/L.
Key research gaps for the assessment of iron status in settings of inflammation
| Problem or question | Studies or technological developments needed (examples) |
| Need field-friendly and cost-effective inflammatory biomarkers that are standardized across laboratories. | Simple, accurate, reliable, and inexpensive inflammation biomarkers tests |
| Do the characteristic patterns of change in AP proteins differ according to population group and inflammation etiologies (e.g., infection, obesity, and trauma)? | Ecologic studies on inflammation |
| What is the magnitude and duration of the effects of inflammation on iron status and iron indicators? How long after the inflammatory event do the iron indicators become useful indexes? | Longitudinal studies in children and adults that define which and when commonly used iron-status indicators are affected by inflammation including infectious and noninfectious triggers of inflammation |
| How responsive are iron indicators to interventions, and which are more useful to monitor trends and the impact of public health interventions (e.g., bioindicators)? | Effectiveness studies unadjusted and adjusted for inflammation |
| How close is the inflammation-adjusted prevalence to the true prevalence of ID? | Validation studies that measure indicators of iron status, inflammation, and gold-standard bone marrow iron |
AP, acute phase; ID, iron deficiency.