Iron status and anaemia in Sri Lankan secondary school children: A cross-sectional survey.

<h4>Background</h4>Iron deficiency, the most common micronutrient disorder and cause of anaemia globally, impairs growth, cognition, behaviour and resistance to infection.<h4>Methods/results</h4>As part of a national survey of inherited haemoglobin variants in 7526 students f...

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Main Authors: Angela Allen, Stephen Allen, Rexan Rodrigo, Lakshman Perera, Wei Shao, Chao Li, Duolao Wang, Nancy Olivieri, David J Weatherall, Anuja Premawardhena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188110
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spelling doaj-dfbee8e342db4847b84901e258defdff2021-03-04T12:40:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011211e018811010.1371/journal.pone.0188110Iron status and anaemia in Sri Lankan secondary school children: A cross-sectional survey.Angela AllenStephen AllenRexan RodrigoLakshman PereraWei ShaoChao LiDuolao WangNancy OlivieriDavid J WeatherallAnuja Premawardhena<h4>Background</h4>Iron deficiency, the most common micronutrient disorder and cause of anaemia globally, impairs growth, cognition, behaviour and resistance to infection.<h4>Methods/results</h4>As part of a national survey of inherited haemoglobin variants in 7526 students from 72 secondary schools purposefully selected from the 25 districts of Sri Lanka, we studied 5912 students with a normal haemoglobin genotype. Median age was 16.0 (IQR 15.0-17.0) years and 3189 (53.9%) students were males. Most students were Sinhalese (65.7%), with fewer Tamils (23.1%) and Muslims (11.2%). Anaemia occurred in 470 students and was more common in females (11.1%) than males (5.6%). Haemoglobin, serum ferritin, transferrin receptor and iron were determined in 1196 students with low red cell indices and a structured sample of those with normal red cell indices (n = 513). The findings were weighted to estimate the frequencies of iron deficiency and iron deficiency anaemia classified according to WHO criteria. Iron depletion (serum ferritin <15ug/ml) occurred in 19.2% and cellular iron deficiency (low serum ferritin and transferrin receptor >28.1 nmol/l) in 11.6% students. Iron deficiency anaemia (cellular iron deficiency with low haemoglobin) occurred in only 130/2794 (4.6%) females and 28/2789 (1.0%) males. Iron biomarkers were normal in 83/470 (14.6%) students with anaemia. In multiple regression analysis, the odds for iron depletion and cellular iron deficiency were about one-third in males compared with females, and the odds for iron deficiency anaemia were about one fifth in males compared to females. Tamil ethnicity and age <16 years increased the risk of all three stages of iron deficiency and living at high altitude significantly reduced the risk of iron depletion.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Low iron status and anaemia remain common problems in Sri Lankan secondary school students especially females, younger students and the socioeconomically disadvantaged Tamil population. More research is needed to identify factors other than low iron status that contribute to anaemia in adolescents.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188110
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angela Allen
Stephen Allen
Rexan Rodrigo
Lakshman Perera
Wei Shao
Chao Li
Duolao Wang
Nancy Olivieri
David J Weatherall
Anuja Premawardhena
spellingShingle Angela Allen
Stephen Allen
Rexan Rodrigo
Lakshman Perera
Wei Shao
Chao Li
Duolao Wang
Nancy Olivieri
David J Weatherall
Anuja Premawardhena
Iron status and anaemia in Sri Lankan secondary school children: A cross-sectional survey.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Angela Allen
Stephen Allen
Rexan Rodrigo
Lakshman Perera
Wei Shao
Chao Li
Duolao Wang
Nancy Olivieri
David J Weatherall
Anuja Premawardhena
author_sort Angela Allen
title Iron status and anaemia in Sri Lankan secondary school children: A cross-sectional survey.
title_short Iron status and anaemia in Sri Lankan secondary school children: A cross-sectional survey.
title_full Iron status and anaemia in Sri Lankan secondary school children: A cross-sectional survey.
title_fullStr Iron status and anaemia in Sri Lankan secondary school children: A cross-sectional survey.
title_full_unstemmed Iron status and anaemia in Sri Lankan secondary school children: A cross-sectional survey.
title_sort iron status and anaemia in sri lankan secondary school children: a cross-sectional survey.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description <h4>Background</h4>Iron deficiency, the most common micronutrient disorder and cause of anaemia globally, impairs growth, cognition, behaviour and resistance to infection.<h4>Methods/results</h4>As part of a national survey of inherited haemoglobin variants in 7526 students from 72 secondary schools purposefully selected from the 25 districts of Sri Lanka, we studied 5912 students with a normal haemoglobin genotype. Median age was 16.0 (IQR 15.0-17.0) years and 3189 (53.9%) students were males. Most students were Sinhalese (65.7%), with fewer Tamils (23.1%) and Muslims (11.2%). Anaemia occurred in 470 students and was more common in females (11.1%) than males (5.6%). Haemoglobin, serum ferritin, transferrin receptor and iron were determined in 1196 students with low red cell indices and a structured sample of those with normal red cell indices (n = 513). The findings were weighted to estimate the frequencies of iron deficiency and iron deficiency anaemia classified according to WHO criteria. Iron depletion (serum ferritin <15ug/ml) occurred in 19.2% and cellular iron deficiency (low serum ferritin and transferrin receptor >28.1 nmol/l) in 11.6% students. Iron deficiency anaemia (cellular iron deficiency with low haemoglobin) occurred in only 130/2794 (4.6%) females and 28/2789 (1.0%) males. Iron biomarkers were normal in 83/470 (14.6%) students with anaemia. In multiple regression analysis, the odds for iron depletion and cellular iron deficiency were about one-third in males compared with females, and the odds for iron deficiency anaemia were about one fifth in males compared to females. Tamil ethnicity and age <16 years increased the risk of all three stages of iron deficiency and living at high altitude significantly reduced the risk of iron depletion.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Low iron status and anaemia remain common problems in Sri Lankan secondary school students especially females, younger students and the socioeconomically disadvantaged Tamil population. More research is needed to identify factors other than low iron status that contribute to anaemia in adolescents.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188110
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