Abstract

Animal studies suggest prebiotics can increase iron absorption, but results from human studies are equivocal. In iron-depleted women, before (baseline) and after daily consumption of galacto-oligosaccharides (GOS) for 4 wk, we sought to assess fractional iron absorption (FIA) from an iron supplement given with and without single doses of GOS in test meals or water. In all women (n=34; median serum ferritin concentration = 16.4 µg/L), FIA from doses of 14 mg iron labeled with stable isotopes was measured in the following conditions at baseline: 1) FIA from ferrous fumarate (FeFum) in water given with and without 15 g GOS; 2) FIA from FeFum in a test meal given with and without 15 g GOS; 3) FIA from ferrous sulfate (FeSO4) in a test meal given without 15 g GOS. All subjects then consumed∼15 g GOS daily for 4 wk. Then the following conditions were tested: 4) FIA from FeFum in a test meal with and without 15 g GOS; and 5) FIA from FeSO4 in a test meal with 15 g GOS. FIA was measured as erythrocyte incorporation of stable isotopes. At baseline, GOS significantly increased FIA from FeFum when given with water (+61%; P<0.001) and the meal (+28%; P=0.002). After 4 wk of GOS consumption, GOS again significantly increased FIA from FeFum in the meal (+29%; P=0.044). However, compared with baseline, consumption of GOS for 4 wk did not significantly enhance absorption from FeFum in the meal given without GOS. FIA from FeSO4 given with GOS in a meal after 4 wk of GOS consumption was not significantly greater than FIA from FeSO4 in a meal without GOS at baseline. In iron-depleted women, GOS given with FeFum increases FIA, but 4 wk of GOS consumption did not enhance this effect. The study was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03325270.

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