| Literature DB >> 35893877 |
Dominika Skolmowska1, Dominika Głąbska1, Aleksandra Kołota1, Dominika Guzek2.
Abstract
Pregnant women are among the population groups most vulnerable to the development of anemia, as the overall iron requirement during pregnancy is significantly higher than in non-pregnant women. The aim of the systematic review was to assess the effectiveness of dietary interventions in the prevention and treatment of iron-deficiency anemia in pregnant women based on randomized-controlled trials. The systematic review was based on the PRISMA guidelines and is registered in the PROSPERO database (CRD42021261235). The search was conducted within PubMed and Web of Science databases for the period until June 2021. The included randomized controlled trials presented effectiveness of dietary interventions in prevention and treatment of iron-deficiency anemia in pregnant women. From the total number of 7825 screened records, the final number of seven studies were included in the systematic review. The procedure of screening, inclusion, reporting, and assessment of the risk of bias while using the revised Cochrane risk of bias tool for randomized trials was conducted by two independent researchers. The studies included in the systematic review were conducted in populations of anemic pregnant women, or mixed populations of anemic and non-anemic pregnant women. The interventions described within the studies were associated with including fortified products, regular products, or dietary counselling. They were based on providing an increased amount of iron, providing an increased amount of multiple nutrients, or general counselling only, while effectiveness was compared with effectiveness of the placebo, supplementation, or control group. The study duration was diversified from a few weeks to half a year or longer. The major biochemical measure assessed within the included studies was hemoglobin. All applied dietary interventions, based on providing increased amount of iron, providing increased amount of multiple nutrients, or general counselling only, were effective. The majority of included studies were assessed as ones of a medium risk of bias. For some studies a high risk of bias was indicated, which resulted from a risk of bias arising from the randomization process, due to deviations from the intended interventions, and in selection of the reported result. Considering this fact, more randomized controlled trials should be planned and conducted in a rigorous manner to confirm the formulated observations of effectiveness of the studied interventions based on providing an increased amount of iron, providing an increased amount of multiple nutrients, or general counselling only.Entities:
Keywords: anemia; diet; iron; iron deficiency; iron intake; nutrition; pregnancy; pregnant; randomized controlled trials; vitamin C intake
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35893877 PMCID: PMC9332092 DOI: 10.3390/nu14153023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 6.706
The criteria for a population, intervention/exposure, comparator, outcome, and study design (PICOS).
| PICOS | Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Anemic and non-anemic pregnant women | Pregnant women with diseases and conditions, which may influence either iron status or reliability of results |
| Intervention/exposure | Dietary intervention applied to prevent or treat anemia | Undefined dietary intervention |
| Comparison | Effectiveness of dietary intervention vs. effectiveness of supplementation/placebo/control, or the other dietary approach | Effectiveness of dietary intervention not defined, or influenced by interfering factors |
| Outcome | Biochemical parameters of anemia/iron stores/iron status | Biochemical parameters of anemia/iron stores/iron status for a mixed population of pregnant and non-pregnant women |
| Study design | Randomized controlled trials | Results not published peer-reviewed journals, not published in English, and retracted articles |
The strategy of the electronic searching within PubMed and Web of Science databases.
| Database | The Detailed Strategy of the Electronic Searching |
|---|---|
| PubMed | (“anaemia” [Title/Abstract] OR “anemia” [Title/Abstract] OR “anaemic” [Title/Abstract] OR “anemic” [Title/Abstract] OR “low haemoglobin” [Title/Abstract] OR “iron status” [Title/Abstract]) AND (“iron” [Title/Abstract]) AND (“nutrition” [Title/Abstract] OR “diet” [Title/Abstract] OR “diets” [Title/Abstract] OR “nutritional” [Title/Abstract] OR “dietary” [Title/Abstract]) |
| Web of Science | AB = (anaemia OR anemia OR anaemic OR anemic OR low haemoglobin OR iron status) AND AB = (iron) AND AB = (nutrition OR diet OR diets OR nutritional OR dietary) |
Figure 1The identification, screening, and inclusion procedure of the studies available in PubMed and Web of Science databases.
The basic characteristics of the randomized controlled trials included in the systematic review [22,23,24,25,26,27,28].
| Ref. | Authors, Year | Compared Interventions | Studied Group of Women | Country/Location | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Makola et al., 2003 | Diet with fortified beverage vs. diet with placebo beverage | Pregnant anemic and non-anemic women | Tanzania/Mpwapwa and Kongwa districts | August–October 1999 |
| [ | Hoa et al., 2005 | Diet with milk fortified with iron vs. diet with nonfortified milk vs. supplement vs. placebo | Pregnant anemic and non-anemic women | Vietnam/Thai Binh province | 1996–1997 |
| [ | Susheela et al., 2010 | Diet vs. control | Pregnant anemic women | India/Delhi | Beginning: 2005; for 2.5 years |
| [ | Wijaya-Erhardt et al., 2011 | Diet vs. control | Pregnant anemic and non-anemic women | Indonesia/Central Java province | November 2007–October 2008 |
| [ | Shivalli et al., 2015 | Diet vs. control | Pregnant anemic and non-anemic women | India/Varanasi district | May 2010–April 2011 |
| [ | Janmohamed et al., 2016 | Diet with corn soya blend vs. control | Pregnant anemic and non-anemic women | Cambodia/Kampong Chhnang province | Recruitment: August 2011–June 2012 |
| [ | Darwish et al., 2018 | Diet with lactoferrin vs. total dose infusion of low-molecular weight iron dextran | Pregnant anemic women | Egypt/Assiut | September 2015–October 2017 |
The characteristics of the participants of the randomized controlled trials included in the systematic review [22,23,24,25,26,27,28].
| Ref. | Number of Participants | Age (Mean/Median/Range) | Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 259 | 25.4 years | Pregnancy; 12–34 week of gestation; attending prenatal clinics in the hospitals and surrounding health centers of Mpwapwa and Kongwa districts | Hemoglobin concentration of <80 g/L; serious medical condition; complication of pregnancy such as cardiac disease, pneumonia, and threatened abortion |
| [ | 168 | 25.0–25.8 years, depending on group | Pregnancy; age of 20–32 years; no more than two prior pregnancies; hemoglobin > 70 g/L | Stillbirths, premature births, or hemorrhage in previous pregnancies; manifestations of chronic or infectious diseases, including hookworm infection; planned travel or plans to move out of the area during the study period |
| [ | 205 | Not specified | Pregnancy; anemia (hemoglobin 50–90 g/L); urinary fluoride > 1.0 mg/L | Gestation > 20 weeks; diabetes; tuberculosis; bleeding during pregnancy; high blood pressure; HIV/AIDS; malaria; other medical problems |
| [ | 227 | 15–49 years | Pregnancy; age of 15–49 years; 12–20 weeks of gestation; predicted singleton neonates | Severe maternal illness |
| [ | 86 | 22.9–23.2 years, depending on group | Pregnancy; age of 15–45 years; a history of amenorrhea; 13–28 week of gestation | Acute illness; severe medical or obstetrical complications; multiple pregnancy; gestational diabetes; not staying for a minimum period of 12 weeks in the study area |
| [ | 495 | 26.2–26.9 years, depending on group | Pregnancy; age of ≥18 years; being in the first trimester of pregnancy; planning to stay in the home village for the duration of the pregnancy | Fetal loss; migration |
| [ | 93 | 27.3–29.5 years, depending on group | Pregnancy; age of ≥18 years; 14–28 weeks of gestation; iron-deficiency anemia (hemoglobin level of 70–100 g/L) | Anemia predominantly caused by factors other than iron-deficiency (e.g., anemia with untreated B12 or folate deficiency, hemolytic anemia); iron overload or disturbances in utilization of iron (e.g., hemochromatosis and hemosiderosis); decompensated liver cirrhosis and active hepatitis; active acute or chronic infections; rheumatoid arthritis with symptoms or signs of active inflammation; history of multiple allergies; gastrointestinal tract diseases; known hypersensitivity to parenteral iron or any recipients in the investigational drug products; receiving erythropoietin treatment within 8 weeks prior to the screening visit or other iron treatment or blood transfusion within 4 weeks prior to the screening visit |
The description of the intervention applied within the randomized controlled trials included in the systematic review [22,23,24,25,26,27,28].
| Ref. | Characteristics of Applied Intervention | Iron Intake within Diet | Vitamin C Intake within Diet | Study Duration | Biochemical Measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | (1) Diet with fortified beverage: orange-flavored micronutrient-fortified powdered beverage mix containing 11 micronutrients (iron, iodine, zinc, | Not specified | Not specified | 8 weeks | Hemoglobin, serum ferritin |
| [ | (1) Diet with milk powder fortified with iron: 400 mL of milk fortified with iron (15 mg/day), fortified with vitamin C and folic acid; | At baseline: | At baseline: 41.1–50.4 | 16 weeks | Hemoglobin, transferrin saturation |
| [ | (1) Diet: counselling based on intake of calcium, iron, folic acid, vitamins C, E and other antioxidants through dairy products, vegetables, and fruits, accompanied by removal of fluoride from ingestion through drinking water, food, and other sources; | Not specified | Not specified | 20 weeks | Hemoglobin |
| [ | (1) Diet: 600 g of tempeh, 30 g of meat, 30 g of dry anchovies, 30 g of chicken liver, 350 g of guava, 300 g of papaya, 100 g of orange provided weekly as a supplementary products (providing 3.97 mg of iron and 173 mg of vitamin C per day); free access to receive tablets containing 60 mg of Fe and 250 mg of folic acid; | Not specified | Not specified | Not specified | Hemoglobin, ferritin, transferrin receptor, body iron concentration |
| [ | (1) Diet: Trials of Improved Practices (TIPs) applied through 3 home visits (assessment, negotiation, and evaluation) to interview, counsel and assess the results of implementing novel dietary practices; | At baseline: | Not controlled * | 12 weeks | Hemoglobin |
| [ | (1) Diet: counselling focused on best practices related to diet, anemia prevention and management; Corn Soya Blend Plus supplements (CSB Plus) provided from the first trimester to delivery (6.75 kg of CSB Plus and 300 mL of vitamin A- and vitamin D-fortified palmolein oil to be added during cooking, monthly—daily ration of 200 g of CSB Plus and 10 mL of oil—850 kcal, 13 mg of iron, 200 mg of vitamin C); receiving daily tablets containing iron (60 mg) and folic acid (400 mg) and if anemic—2 iron-folic acid tablets per day for 14 days; | Not specified | Not specified | 6–8 months | Hemoglobin |
| [ | (1) Diet with lactoferrin: pineapple flavored lactoferrin oral sachets (100 mg) two times per day for 4 weeks accompanied with health education (including treatment for anemia during pregnancy); avoiding coffee and tea particularly immediately after meals; increasing dietary intake of iron-rich food and vitamin C-rich food; | Not controlled * | Not controlled * | 4 weeks | Hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), serum iron, ferritin, and total iron binding capacity |
* Data provided on request.
The observations and conclusions formulated within the randomized controlled trials included in the systematic review [22,23,24,25,26,27,28].
| Ref. | Observations | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|
| [ | The supplement resulted in a 4.16 g/L increase in hemoglobin concentration and a 3 µg/L increase in ferritin and reduced the risk of anemia and iron deficiency anemia by 51 and 56%, respectively. The risk of iron deficiency was reduced by 70% among those who had iron deficiency at baseline and by 92% among those who had adequate stores. | The micronutrient-fortified beverage may be a useful and convenient preventative measure, one that could help improve the nutritional status of women both before and during pregnancy and thereby help avoid some of the potential maternal and fetal consequences of micronutrient deficiencies. |
| [ | After the 16th week of intervention, the changes in hemoglobin concentrations in both treatment groups (the iron-fortified milk and the iron tablet groups) were not significantly different (−0.5 ± 0.9 and −0.3 ± 0.9 g/L, respectively), but the changes were significantly greater in the nonfortified milk and placebo groups (−1.2 ± 0.9 and −1.1 ± 0.8 g/L, respectively; | Applying iron-fortified milk and the iron tablets may prevent deterioration of iron status. |
| [ | An increase in hemoglobin upon nutritional intervention in 73% during the 1st trimester and in 83% during the 2nd trimester of pregnancy has been recorded. | An intervention approach has scope for reducing anemia in pregnancy. |
| [ | At near term, mean hemoglobin, ferritin and body iron decreased, whereas mean transferrin receptor increased significantly in both groups. The mean changes in iron status were similar in both groups. In Fe-deficient women, consumption of an optimized diet was associated with smaller decreases in hemoglobin (1.02 (95% CI 0.98, 1.07) g/L; | Daily supplementary food containing tempeh and vitamin C-rich fruits during pregnancy might have positive effects on maternal iron deficiency. |
| [ | At the end, mean hemoglobin levels were 115 ± 12.4 g/L and 103.7 ± 13.8 g/L in the TIPs group and control group, respectively. The prevalence of anemia was reduced by half in the TIPs group and increased by 2.4% in the control group. | Trials of Improved Practices (TIPs) were found to be an effective approach to improve the nutritional status of pregnant women in the study area. |
| [ | Significant reductions were observed in anemia at 36–38 week (OR = 0.51; 95% CI: 0.34, 0.77). | In Cambodian women, Corn Soya Blend Plus consumed during pregnancy significantly reduced maternal anemia in late gestation in comparison with women consuming a normal diet. |
| [ | There was no statistically significant difference in mean hemoglobin level improvement in both groups after one month of therapy. However, MCV and MCH improved significantly more in group receiving infusions of iron dextran than diet with lactoferrin while iron indices (serum iron and serum ferritin) were significantly more in group receiving diet with lactoferrin than group receiving infusions of iron dextran. | Pineapple flavored lactoferrin oral sachets plus health education can be widely used as an alternative to total dose infusion iron dextran supplementation due to clinical as well as laboratory improvement of iron-deficiency anemia during pregnancy after one month of treatment. |
The summary of conclusions formulated within the randomized controlled trials included in the systematic review [22,23,24,25,26,27,28].
| Dietary Approach | Ref. | Group of Studied Women | Conclusion * |
|---|---|---|---|
| Providing an increased amount of iron | [ | Anemic and non-anemic women | Supporting |
| [ | Anemic women | Supporting | |
| Providing an increased amount of multiple nutrients | [ | Anemic and non-anemic women | Supporting |
| [ | Anemic women | Supporting | |
| [ | Anemic and non-anemic women | Supporting | |
| [ | Anemic and non-anemic women | Supporting | |
| General counselling only | [ | Anemic and non-anemic women | Supporting |
* The assessment based on conclusions formulated within the study by the authors—defined as supporting or not supporting applied dietary intervention, based on the assessed biochemical measures.
The assessment of the risk of bias within the randomized controlled trials included in the systematic review conducted using the revised Cochrane risk of bias tool for randomized trials [22,23,24,25,26,27,28].
| Ref. | Ref. | D1 | D2 | D3 | D4 | D5 | Overall Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Providing an increased amount of iron | [ |
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—Low risk; —Some concerns —High risk; Domains as follows: D1—risk of bias arising from the randomization process; D2—risk of bias due to deviations from the intended interventions; D3—risk of bias due to missing outcome data; D4—risk of bias in measurement of the outcome; D5—risk of bias in selection of the reported result.