| Literature DB >> 35720171 |
Hugo G Quezada-Pinedo1,2, Florian Cassel3, Martina U Muckenthaler4,5, Max Gassmann6,7, Luis Huicho7,8, Irwin K Reiss1,3, Liesbeth Duijts2,9, Romy Gaillard1,3, Marijn J Vermeulen1,2,3.
Abstract
We studied ethnic differences in terms of iron status during pregnancy between Dutch women and other ethnicities and explore to what extent these differences can be explained by environmental factors. This cross-sectional population-based study (2002-2006) was embedded in the Generation R study and included a total of 4737 pregnant women from seven ethnic groups (Dutch, Turkish, Moroccan, Cape Verdean, Surinamese-Hindustani, Surinamese-Creole and Antillean). Ethnicity was defined according to the Dutch classification of ethnic background. Ferritin, iron and transferrin were measured in early pregnancy. The overall prevalence of iron deficiency was 7 %, ranging from 4 % in both Dutch and Surinamese-Creoles, to 18 % in Turkish, Moroccan and Surinamese-Hindustani women. Iron overload was most prevalent in Surinamese-Creole (11 %) and Dutch (9 %) women. Socioeconomic factors accounted for 5-36 % of the differences. Income was the strongest socioeconomic factor in the Cape Verdean and Surinamese-Hindustani groups and parity for the Turkish and Moroccan groups. Lifestyle determinants accounted for 8-14 % of the differences. In all groups, the strongest lifestyle factor was folic acid use, being associated with higher iron status. In conclusion, in our population, both iron deficiency and iron overload were common in early pregnancy. Our data suggest that ethnic differences in terms of socioeconomic and lifestyle factors only partly drive the large ethnic differences in iron status. Our data support the development of more specific prevention programmes based on further exploration of socioeconomic inequities, modifiable risk and genetic factors in specific ethnic subgroups, as well as the need for individual screening of iron status before supplementation.Entities:
Keywords: Ferritin; Haemoglobin; Iron overload; Iron-deficiency anaemia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35720171 PMCID: PMC9161035 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2022.35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Population characteristics for total study population and by ethnic subgroup
| Total ( | Dutch ( | Turkish ( | Moroccan ( | Cape Verdean ( | Surinamese-Hindustani ( | Surinamese-Creole ( | Antillean ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 29⋅9 (5⋅0) | 31⋅2 (4⋅3) | ||||||
| GA at blood sampling (weeks) | 13⋅4 (2⋅0) | 13⋅2 (1⋅9) | ||||||
| CRP (mg/l) | 4⋅6 (2⋅5, 8⋅2) | 4⋅1 (2⋅3, 7⋅4) | 5⋅3 (2⋅9, 8⋅8) | 6⋅3 (3⋅4, 10⋅1)* | 4⋅8 (3⋅0, 8⋅9) | 6⋅5 (3⋅6, 11⋅5)* | 5⋅4 (2⋅6, 9⋅8) | 4⋅8 (2⋅5, 9⋅4) |
| Monthly household income, | ||||||||
| <1200 € | 668 (17⋅3) | 148 (5⋅4) | 145 (41⋅8) | 107 (51⋅2) | 95 (59⋅0) | 51 (34⋅5) | 54 (46⋅6) | 68 (54⋅0) |
| 1200–2200 € | 954 (24⋅7) | 565 (20⋅5) | 144 (41⋅5) | 82 (39⋅2) | 50 (31⋅1) | 51 (34⋅5) | 30 (25⋅9) | 32 (25⋅4) |
| >2200 € | 2244 (58⋅0) | 2046 (74⋅2) | 58 (16⋅7) | 20 (9⋅6) | 16 (9⋅9) | 46 (31⋅1) | 32 (27⋅6) | 26 (20⋅6) |
| Educational level, | ||||||||
| Low | 446 (9⋅7) | 109 (3⋅5) | 135 (30⋅8) | 91 (28⋅7) | 50 (22⋅5) | 21 (10⋅2) | 12 (7⋅5) | 28 (17⋅0) |
| Intermediate | 2108 (46⋅0) | 1150 (37⋅4) | 236 (53⋅8) | 185 (58⋅4) | 151 (68⋅0) | 156 (75⋅7) | 123 (76⋅4) | 107 (64⋅8) |
| High | 2028 (44⋅3) | 1813 (59⋅0) | 68 (15⋅5) | 41 (12⋅9) | 21 (9⋅5) | 29 (14⋅1) | 26 (16⋅1) | 30 (18⋅2) |
| Nulliparous (%) | 2710 (57⋅4) | 1887 (60⋅8) | 136 (56⋅4) | 130 (61⋅6) | 97 (57⋅1) | |||
| Dietary iron intake (mg/d) | 11⋅1 (8⋅7, 13⋅5) | 11⋅8 (9⋅6, 14⋅1) | ||||||
| Iron supplement use, yes (%) | 1201 (29⋅2) | 980 (35⋅8) | ||||||
| Folic acid supplement use, | ||||||||
| No use | 918 (24⋅3) | 266 (10⋅4) | 193 (52⋅3) | 173 (65⋅8) | 110 (61⋅1) | 70 (42⋅7) | 50 (38⋅8) | 56 (44⋅1) |
| Periconceptional use | 1673 (44⋅3) | 1442 (56⋅6) | 75 (20⋅3) | 40 (15⋅2) | 19 (10⋅6) | 37 (22⋅6) | 24 (18⋅6) | 36 (28⋅3) |
| First 10 weeks use | 1188 (31⋅4) | 839 (32⋅9) | 101 (27⋅4) | 50 (19⋅0) | 51 (28⋅3) | 57 (34⋅8) | 55 (42⋅6) | 35 (27⋅6) |
| BMI (kg/m) | 24⋅6 (4⋅5) | 24⋅1 (4⋅1) | 24⋅2 (5⋅2) | |||||
| Smoking during pregnancy, yes (%) | 1228 (28⋅3) | 776 (27⋅0) | 52 (25⋅7) | 51 (32⋅1) | ||||
| Psychological distress, yes (%) | 357 (9⋅2) | 100 (3⋅7) | ||||||
Values are means (sd), medians (25th, 75th percentile) or absolute numbers (percentages) based on observed data. BMI, Pre-pregnancy body max index; CRP, C-reactive protein; GA, gestational age. Values that are significantly different as compared to the Dutch reference group are indicated in bold (P < 0⋅05), with * (P < 0⋅01) or ** (P < 0⋅001), based on T test, Mann–Whitney U test and χ2 test.
Ferritin concentrations and the prevalence of iron deficiency and overload during early pregnancy by ethnic background
| All | Dutch | Turkish | Moroccan | Cape Verdean | Surinamese- Hindustani | Surinamese- Creole | Antillean | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4737 | 3112 | 474 | 352 | 244 | 212 | 170 | 173 | ||
| Serum ferritin, μg/l | median | 52⋅9 | 60⋅9 | 59⋅8 | |||||
| (p25,p75) | (30⋅6, 85⋅1) | (37⋅5, 95⋅0) | (31⋅7, 96⋅9) | ||||||
| Iron deficiency | 330 (7⋅0) | 110 (3⋅5) | 7 (4⋅1) | 10 (5⋅8) | |||||
| Iron overload | 318 (6⋅7) | 270 (8⋅7) | 18 (10⋅6) | 11 (6⋅4) |
N, number of participants.
Defined as serum ferritin <15 μg/l; normal serum ferritin (15–150 μg/l).
Defined as serum ferritin >150 μg/l.
Values that are significantly different as compared to the Dutch reference group are indicated in bold (P < 0⋅05), with * (P < 0⋅01) or ** (P < 0⋅001), based on T test, Mann–Whitney U test and χ2 test.
Multivariable analyses of the association between ethnicity and ferritin, iron deficiency, and iron overload during early pregnancy
| Total ( | Dutch ( | Turkish ( | Moroccan ( | Cape Verdean ( | Surinamese-Hindustani ( | Surinamese-Creole ( | Antillean ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Serum ferritin (SDS) | |||||||
| Basic model | Ref | 0⋅0 (−0⋅2, 0⋅1) | |||||
| Ref | 0⋅1 (−0⋅0, 0⋅3) | 0⋅0 (−0⋅1, 0⋅2) | |||||
| LS model | Ref | 0⋅0 (−0⋅2, 0⋅1) | −0⋅1 (−0⋅3, 0⋅0) | ||||
| Full model | Ref | 0⋅1 (−0⋅0, 0⋅3) | 0⋅0 (−0⋅1, 0⋅2) | ||||
| Iron deficiency | |||||||
| OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | ||
| Basic model | 1⋅0 | 1⋅1 (0⋅5, 2⋅4) | 1⋅5 (0⋅8, 2⋅9) | ||||
| 1⋅0 | 1⋅6 (0⋅9, 2⋅8) | 0⋅9 (0⋅4, 2⋅0) | 1⋅2 (0⋅6, 2⋅4) | ||||
| LS model | 1⋅0 | 1⋅6 (0⋅9, 2⋅8) | 0⋅9 (0⋅4, 2⋅1) | 1⋅3 (0⋅6, 2⋅6) | |||
| Full model | 1⋅0 | 1⋅5 (0⋅8, 2⋅6) | 0⋅8 (0⋅4, 1⋅9) | 1⋅1 (0⋅5, 2⋅3) | |||
| Iron overload | |||||||
| OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | OR (95 % CI) | ||
| Basic model | 1⋅0 | 1⋅4 (0⋅8, 2⋅3) | 0⋅8 (0⋅4, 1⋅5) | ||||
| 1⋅0 | 0⋅6 (0⋅3, 1⋅3) | 1⋅1 (0⋅6, 2⋅2) | |||||
| LS model | 1⋅0 | 1⋅3 (0⋅8, 2⋅2) | 0⋅8 (0⋅4, 1⋅5) | ||||
| Full model | 1⋅0 | 0⋅6 (0⋅3, 1⋅3) | 1⋅0 (0⋅5, 2⋅0) | ||||
Values indicate betas (β, reflecting change in ferritin SDS) or odds ratios (ORs) with 95 % confidence interval (95 % CI), derived from linear (for serum ferritin SDS as a continuous variable) and logistic regression models (for iron deficiency and iron overload as categorical outcomes) based on multiple imputed data, reported per ethnic group compared with the Dutch (reference) group. Normal serum ferritin (15–150 μg/l). Iron deficiency is defined as serum ferritin <15 μg/l (yes/no), and iron overload as serum ferritin >150 μg/l (yes/no). The basic model was adjusted for age, gestational age at iron blood sampling and C-reactive protein. The socioeconomic (se) model was adjusted for the factors in the basic model and for income, education and parity. The lifestyle (LS) model was adjusted for the factors in the basic model and dietary iron intake, iron supplement use, folic acid supplement use, body mass index, smoking during pregnancy and psychological distress. The full model included all these determinants named (see Supplementary Figure S2). Values that are significant are indicated in bold (P < 0⋅05), with * (P < 0⋅01) or ** (P < 0⋅001).
Fig. 1.Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition explaining differences in early pregnancy. Relative contributions of determinants to the lower mean maternal serum ferritin concentration in early pregnancy as compared to the Dutch reference group. Basic determinants: age, gestational age at iron blood sampling, C-reactive protein; socioeconomic determinants: monthly household income, education, parity; lifestyle determinants: dietary iron intake, iron supplementation, folic acid supplement use, pre-pregnancy body mass index, smoking during pregnancy, psychological distress (see also Supplementary Table S3).