Abstract

IntroductionIron deficiency is highly prevalent in pre-school children in developing countries and an important health problem in sub-Saharan Africa. A debate exists on the possible protective effect of iron deficiency against malaria and other infections; yet consensus is lacking due to limited data. Recent studies have focused on the risks of iron supplementation but the effect of an individual's iron status on malaria risk remains unclear. Studies of iron status in areas with a high burden of infections often are exposed to bias. The aim of this study was to assess the predictive value of baseline iron status for malaria risk explicitly taking potential biases into account.Methods and materialsWe prospectively assessed the relationship between baseline iron deficiency (serum ferritin <30 µg/L) and malaria risk in a cohort of 727 Malawian preschool children during a year of follow-up. Data were analyzed using marginal structural Cox regression models and confounders were selected using causal graph theory. Sensitivity of results to bias resulting from misclassification of iron status by concurrent inflammation and to bias from unmeasured confounding were assessed using modern causal inference methods.Results and ConclusionsThe overall incidence of malaria parasitemia and clinical malaria was 1.9 (95% CI 1.8–2.0) and 0.7 (95% CI 0.6–0.8) events per person-year, respectively. Children with iron deficiency at baseline had a lower incidence of malaria parasitemia and clinical malaria during a year of follow-up; adjusted hazard ratio's 0.55 (95%-CI:0.41–0.74) and 0.49 (95%-CI:0.33–0.73), respectively. Our results suggest that iron deficiency protects against malaria parasitemia and clinical malaria in young children. Therefore the clinical importance of treating iron deficiency in a pre-school child should be weighed carefully against potential harms. In malaria endemic areas treatment of iron deficiency in children requires sustained prevention of malaria.

Highlights

  • Iron deficiency is highly prevalent in pre-school children in developing countries and an important health problem in sub-Saharan Africa

  • We prospectively assessed the relationship between baseline iron deficiency and malaria risk in a cohort of 727 Malawian preschool children during a year of follow-up

  • Children with iron deficiency at baseline had a lower incidence of malaria parasitemia and clinical malaria during a year of follow-up; adjusted hazard ratio’s 0.55 (95%-CI:0.41–0.74) and 0.49 (95%-CI:0.33–0.73), respectively

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Summary

Introduction

A debate exists on the possible protective effect of iron deficiency against malaria and other infections; yet consensus is lacking due to limited data. The aim of this study was to assess the predictive value of baseline iron status for malaria risk explicitly taking potential biases into account. In recent years concerns have focused mainly on the possible harmful effects of treating iron deficiency rather than on the effects of iron status itself [13,14,15,16,17,18,19]. The aim of this study was to assess the predictive value of baseline iron status in children for subsequent malaria risk, explicitly taking misclassification of iron deficiency due to concurrent inflammation and confounding bias into account by utilizing modern causal inference methods in the analyses of a dataset of Malawian preschool children

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