| Literature DB >> 31607468 |
Amat Bah1, Abdul Khalie Muhammad2, Rita Wegmuller3, Hans Verhoef4, Morgan M Goheen5, Saikou Sanyang2, Ebrima Danso2, Ebrima A Sise2, Sant-Rayn Pasricha6, Andrew E Armitage7, Hal Drakesmith7, James H Cross1, Sophie E Moore8, Carla Cerami9, Andrew M Prentice10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: WHO recommends daily iron supplementation for pregnant women, but adherence is poor because of side-effects, effectiveness is low, and there are concerns about possible harm. The iron-regulatory hormone hepcidin can signal when an individual is ready-and-safe to receive iron. We tested whether a hepcidin-guided screen-and-treat approach to combat iron-deficiency anaemia could achieve equivalent efficacy to universal administration, but with lower exposure to iron.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31607468 PMCID: PMC7109523 DOI: 10.1016/S2214-109X(19)30393-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Glob Health ISSN: 2214-109X Impact factor: 26.763
Figure 1Trial profile
RDT=rapid diagnostic test.
Primary and secondary outcomes, continuous variables
| Reference group | 139 | 110·1 (0·8) | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 131 | 107·9 (0·8) | –2·2 (–4·6 to 0·1) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 145 | 107·4 (0·8) | –2·7 (–5·0 to −0·5) |
| Reference group | 140 | 6·3 (3·4) | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 132 | 3·3 (4·2) | 0·52 (0·37 to 0·75) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 147 | 2·3 (4·7) | 0·37 (0·26 to 0·52) |
| Reference group | 139 | 34·6 (1·9) | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 130 | 23·1 (1·8) | 0·67 (0·58 to 0·77) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 145 | 21·4 (1·7) | 0·62 (0·54 to 0·71) |
| Reference group | 139 | 31·6 (0·1) | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 130 | 21·2 (0·1) | 0·67 (0·58 to 0·77) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 145 | 19·3 (0·1) | 0·61 (0·53 to 0·70) |
| Reference group | 139 | 2·2 (1·5) | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 129 | 2·9 (1·5) | 1·35 (1·23 to 1·49) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 145 | 3·1 (1·5) | 1·43 (1·31 to 1·58) |
Logarithmic transformation (ln) was done for hepcidin and ferritin variables. GSD=geometric SD.
Estimates are mean (SE); SE obtained by the Delta method. Effect is absolute difference in mean estimate versus the reference group.
Estimates are geometric mean (GSD). Exponentiation of ln-transformed variables yielded effects expressed as ratios of geometric mean estimates versus the reference group.
Estimates obtained using Tobit regression on ln-transformed hepcidin concentrations were left-censored at 0·049 μg/L (limit of detection) and right-censored at 25 μg/L.
Ferritin index is the ratio soluble transferrin receptor: log10-ferritin.
Figure 2Non-inferiority tests
Per-protocol analysis of change in haemoglobin from day 0 to day 84. Values are mean difference (95% CI). Dotted line shows the preset non-inferiority margin of −5 g/L.
Secondary outcomes, categorical variables
| Reference group | 63/139 | 45% | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 75/131 | 57% | 11·9 (0·1 to 23·8) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 86/145 | 59% | 14·0 (2·5 to 25·5) |
| Reference group | 30/140 | 21% | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 55/132 | 42% | 20·2 (9·4 to 31·1) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 77/147 | 52% | 31·0 (20·4 to 41·5) |
| Reference group | 82/140 | 59% | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 116/133 | 87% | 28·6 (18·7 to 38·6) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 131/147 | 89% | 30·5 (21·0 to 40·1) |
| Reference group | 24/140 | 17% | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 38/131 | 29% | 11·9 (1·9 to 21·8) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 58/146 | 40% | 22·6 (12·5 to 32·7) |
| Reference group | 1974/1974 | 100% | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 1025/1905 | 46% | –53·8 (–56·0 to −51·6) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 952/2009 | 53% | –47·4 (–49·6 to −45·2) |
| Reference group | 275/1974 | 86% | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 260/1905 | 86% | 0·3 (0·3 to 0·3) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 246/2009 | 86% | 1·7 (1·7 to 1·7) |
Data are cases/person-weeks.
Safety outcomes
| Reference group | 220/1974 | 111 per 1000 person-weeks | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 261/1906 | 135 per 1000 person-weeks | 1·2 (0·8 to 1·8) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 154/2009 | 78 per 1000 person-weeks | 0·7 (0·5 to 1·0) |
| Reference group | 167/1902 | 89 per 1000 person-weeks | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 149/1861 | 82 per 1000 person-weeks | –7·4 (–26·0 to 11·1) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 175/1945 | 89 per 1000 person-weeks | 1·6 (–17·2 to 20·3) |
| Reference group | 9/1904 | 29 per 10 000 person-weeks | ·· |
| 60 mg screen-and-treat approach | 14/1861 | 47 per 10 000 person-weeks | 18·7 (–12·3 to 49·8) |
| 30 mg screen-and-treat approach | 6/1945 | 18 per 10 000 person-weeks | –10·2 (–34·0 to 13·6) |
Individual complaints and adverse events are listed in the appendix (pp 20–22). Estimates of adverse events and serious adverse events were based on a negative binomial model, accounting for differences in exposure. The effect and 95% CI are the respective exponentiated relative changes in observed counts and their CIs. DSMB=data safety monitoring board.
Figure 3Ex-vivo assays of malaria growth in erythrocytes and sentinel bacteria growth in serum
Left panel in (A) shows growth rates of Plasmodium falciparum strain FCR3-FMG in fresh RBCs relative to growth in RBCs from non-anaemic controls. Right panel in (A) shows reticulocyte counts relative to non-anaemic controls. Black lines show mean values and error bars show SEs. Compared with day 0, parasite growth and reticulocyte counts were significantly higher at day 14 (p=0·0012) and day 49 (p=0·0014), with no differences between treatment groups. Upper section in (B) shows individual participant data. Black lines show mean values and error bars show SEs. Compared with day 0, faster growth rates were seen on day 14, day 49, and day 84, for all species (p<0·0001 for all times). Lower plots in (B) show the proportion of serum samples from participants in which ex-vivo growth rates were greater than the 95% percentile, calculated on day 0 across all groups. All organisms showed significant increases after iron supplementation (p=0·0090). No differences between study groups were noted. RBC=red blood cell. *p<0·0001. †p<0·0001. ‡p=0·0011.