Literature DB >> 33054080

Dietary intake of heme iron is associated with ferritin and hemoglobin levels in Dutch blood donors: results from Donor InSight.

Tiffany C Timmer1, Rosa de Groot2, Judith J M Rijnhart3, Jeroen Lakerveld3, Johannes Brug4, Corine W M Perenboom5, Mireille A Baart5, Femmeke J Prinsze6, Saurabh Zalpuri6, Ellen C van der Schoot1, Wim L A M de Kort1, Katja van den Hurk6.   

Abstract

Whole blood donors, especially frequently donating donors, have a risk of iron deficiency and low hemoglobin levels, which may affect their health and eligibility to donate. Lifestyle behaviors, such as dietary iron intake and physical activity, may influence iron stores and thereby hemoglobin levels. We aimed to investigate whether dietary iron intake and questionnaire-based moderate-to-vigorous physical activity were associated with hemoglobin levels, and whether ferritin levels mediated these associations. In Donor InSight-III, a Dutch cohort study of blood and plasma donors, data on heme and non-heme iron intake (mg/day), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (10 minutes/day), hemoglobin levels (mmol/L) and ferritin levels (μg/L) were available in 2,323 donors (1,074 male). Donors with higher heme iron intakes (regression coefficients (β) in men and women: 0.160 and 0.065 mmol/L higher hemoglobin per 1 mg of heme iron, respectively) and lower non-heme iron intakes (β: -0.014 and -0.017, respectively) had higher hemoglobin levels, adjusted for relevant confounders. Ferritin levels mediated these associations (indirect effect (95% confidence interval) in men and women respectively: 0.074 (0.045; 0.111) and 0.061 (0.030; 0.096) for heme and -0.003 (-0.008;0.001) and -0.008 (-0.013;-0.003) for non-heme). Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity was negatively associated with hemoglobin levels in men only (β: -0.005), but not mediated by ferritin levels. In conclusion, higher heme and lower non-heme iron intake were associated with higher hemoglobin levels in donors, via higher ferritin levels. This indicates that donors with high heme iron intake may be more capable of maintaining iron stores to recover hemoglobin levels after blood donation.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 33054080      PMCID: PMC7556674          DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2019.229450

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Haematologica        ISSN: 0390-6078            Impact factor:   9.941


  5 in total

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3.  Ferritin-guided iron supplementation in whole blood donors: optimal dosage, donor response, return and efficacy (FORTE)-a randomised controlled trial protocol.

Authors:  Jan Karregat; Maike G Sweegers; Franke A Quee; Henriëtte H Weekamp; Dorine W Swinkels; Vĕra M J Novotny; Hans L Zaaijer; Katja van den Hurk
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4.  Ferritin Trajectories over Repeated Whole Blood Donations: Results from the FIND+ Study.

Authors:  Sara Moazzen; Maike G Sweegers; Mart Janssen; Boris M Hogema; Trynke Hoekstra; Katja Van den Hurk
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-06-21       Impact factor: 4.964

5.  Management of children with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency presenting with acute haemolytic crisis during the SARs-COV-2 pandemic.

Authors:  Mohsen Elalfy; Amira Adly; Khadiga Eltonbary; Islam Elghamry; Omar Elalfy; Mohamed Maebid; Khaled Elsayh; Heba-T-Allah N Elsayed; Magdy El Ekiaby
Journal:  Vox Sang       Date:  2021-06-08       Impact factor: 2.996

  5 in total

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