Abstract

BackgroundAnaemia is highly prevalent in children of developing countries. It is associated with impaired physical growth and mental development. Palmar pallor is recommended at primary level for diagnosing it, on the basis of few studies. The objective of the study was to systematically assess the accuracy of clinical signs in the diagnosis of anaemia in children.MethodsA systematic review on the accuracy of clinical signs of anaemia in children. We performed an Internet search in various databases and an additional reference tracking. Studies had to be on performance of clinical signs in the diagnosis of anaemia, using haemoglobin as the gold standard. We calculated pooled diagnostic likelihood ratios (LR's) and odds ratios (DOR's) for each clinical sign at different haemoglobin thresholds.ResultsEleven articles met the inclusion criteria. Most studies were performed in Africa, in children underfive. Chi-square test for proportions and Cochran Q for DOR's and for LR's showed heterogeneity. Type of observer and haemoglobin technique influenced the results. Pooling was done using the random effects model. Pooled DOR at haemoglobin <11 g/dL was 4.3 (95% CI 2.6–7.2) for palmar pallor, 3.7 (2.3–5.9) for conjunctival pallor, and 3.4 (1.8–6.3) for nailbed pallor. DOR's and LR's were slightly better for nailbed pallor at all other haemoglobin thresholds. The accuracy did not vary substantially after excluding outliers.ConclusionThis meta-analysis did not document a highly accurate clinical sign of anaemia. In view of poor performance of clinical signs, universal iron supplementation may be an adequate control strategy in high prevalence areas. Further well-designed studies are needed in settings other than Africa. They should assess inter-observer variation, performance of combined clinical signs, phenotypic differences, and different degrees of anaemia.

Highlights

  • Anaemia is highly prevalent in children of developing countries

  • For the same haemoglobin threshold, pooled LR+ was 3.0 for palmar pallor, 2.7 (1.6–4.5) for nailbed pallor, 2.3 (1.7–3.1) for conjunctival pallor

  • DOR's and likelihood ratios (LR's) were slightly better for nailbed pallor at all other haemoglobin thresholds

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Summary

Introduction

Anaemia is highly prevalent in children of developing countries. It is associated with impaired physical growth and mental development. The objective of the study was to systematically assess the accuracy of clinical signs in the diagnosis of anaemia in children. The global prevalence of anaemia is estimated in 2 billion people, that is, in about 30% of the worldwide population[1]. An even larger number of people present iron deficiency [1]. Every 9 of 10 persons affected of anaemia live in developing countries [2]. Anaemia prevalence in (page number not for citation purposes). Latin America is 46% in children [3], with differences within countries. Anaemia is related to impaired physical growth and mental development [6]. It is associated to a higher risk of infant and child mortality, when it co-exists with malnutrition and other risk factors [7]

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