Abstract
Fetal anemia is common in malaria-endemic areas and a risk factor for anemia as well as mortality during infancy. Placental malaria (PM) and red cell abnormalities have been proposed as possible etiologies, but the relationship between PM and fetal anemia has varied in earlier studies, and the role of red cell abnormalities has not been studied in malaria-endemic areas. In a Tanzanian birth cohort study designed to elucidate the pathogenesis of severe malaria in young infants, we performed a cross-sectional analysis of risk factors for fetal anemia. We determined PM status, newborn red cell abnormalities, and maternal and cord blood levels of iron regulatory proteins, erythropoietin (EPO), cytokines and cytokine receptors. We examined the relationship between these factors and fetal anemia. Fetal anemia was present in 46.2% of the neonates but was not related to PM. Maternal iron deficiency was common (81.6%), most frequent in multigravidae, and interacted with parity to modify risk of fetal anemia, but it was not directly related to risk. Among offspring of iron-deficient women, the odds of fetal anemia increased with fetal α+-thalassemia, as well as these patterns of cord blood cytokines: increased cord IL-6, decreased TNF-RI, and decreased sTfR. The EPO response to fetal anemia was low or absent and EPO levels were significantly decreased in newborns with the most severe anemia. This study from an area of high malaria transmission provides evidence that 1) fetal α+-thalassemia and cytokine balance, but not PM at delivery, are related to fetal anemia; 2) maternal iron deficiency increases the risk that other factors may cause fetal anemia; and 3) fetal anemia has a multifactorial etiology that may require a variety of interventions, although measures that reduce maternal iron deficiency may be generally beneficial.
Highlights
Fetal anemia can be the result of immune or non-immune insults
Fetal anemia is more frequent in malarious areas [6] but the cause is unclear, so we sought to identify maternal and fetal factors that increase the risk of fetal anemia in Tanzania
We confirmed that fetal anemia is common in an area of intense malaria transmission, but that it is not related to Placental malaria (PM) at the time of delivery
Summary
Fetal anemia can be the result of immune or non-immune insults. The most common immune etiology is maternal Rhesus (Rh) disease. In Kenya, anemia during infancy is a risk factor for infant mortality [5]. Fetal anemia, defined as cord blood hemoglobin less than 12.5g/dl, is common in areas where malaria is transmitted [6]. Placental malaria (PM) and thalassemia are common in areas of stable transmission, and have been proposed but not proven to explain the high incidence of fetal anemia in such areas [6]. In an area of high parasite resistance to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) in Tanzania, the use of SP for intermittent preventive therapy (IPTp) to prevent PM and the parasite dhps c581 SP resistance allele are independently related to decreased levels of cord blood hemoglobin in the newborn [13]
Published Version (
Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have