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Title: Afebrile Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia decreases absorption of fortification iron but does not affect systemic iron utilization: a double stable-isotope study in young Beninese women.
Author(s): Cercamondi, C.I.
Egli, I.M.
Ahouandjinou, E.
Dossa, R.
Zeder, C.
Salami, L.
Tjalsma, H. (183489063)
Wiegerinck, E.T.G. (321454529)
Tanno, T.
Hurrell, R.F.
Hounhouigan, J.
Zimmermann, M.B.
Publication year: 2010
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
ISSN: 0002-9165
Volume: vol. 92
Issue: iss. 6
Start page: p. 1385
End page: p. 1392
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Iron deficiency anemia (IDA) affects many young women in sub-Saharan Africa. Its etiology is multifactorial, but the major cause is low dietary iron bioavailability exacerbated by parasitic infections such as malaria. OBJECTIVE: We investigated whether asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia in Beninese women would impair absorption of dietary iron or utilization of circulating iron. DESIGN: Iron absorption and utilization from an iron-fortified sorghum-based meal were estimated by using oral and intravenous isotope labels in 23 afebrile women with a positive malaria smear (asexual P. falciparum parasitemia; > 500 parasites/muL blood). The women were studied while infected, treated, and then restudied 10 d after treatment. Iron status, hepcidin, and inflammation indexes were measured before and after treatment. RESULTS: Treatment reduced low-grade inflammation, as reflected by decreases in serum ferritin, C-reactive protein, interleukin-6, interleukin-8, and interleukin-10 (P < 0.05); this was accompanied by a reduction in median serum hepcidin of approximately 50%, from 2.7 to 1.4 nmol/L (P < 0.005). Treatment decreased serum erythropoietin and growth differentiation factor 15 (P < 0.05). Clearance of parasitemia increased geometric mean dietary iron absorption (from 10.2% to 17.6%; P = 0.008) but did not affect systemic iron utilization (85.0% compared with 83.1%; NS). CONCLUSIONS: Dietary iron absorption is reduced by approximately 40% in asymptomatic P. falciparum parasitemia, likely because of low-grade inflammation and its modulation of circulating hepcidin. Because asymptomatic parasitemia has a protracted course and is very common in malarial areas, this effect may contribute to IDA and blunt the efficacy of iron supplementation and fortification programs. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01108939.
Subject: IGMD 7: Iron metabolism
N4i 3: Poverty-related infectious diseases
Organization: UMCN Extern
Laboratory of Genetic, Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/87990

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