Abstract

The iron status of blood donors is a subject of concern for blood establishments. The Finnish Red Cross Blood Service addresses iron loss in blood donors by proposing systematic iron supplementation for demographic at-risk donor groups. We measured blood count, ferritin and soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) and acquired lifestyle and health information from 2200 blood donors of the FinDonor 10000 cohort. We used modern data analysis methods to estimate iron status and factors affecting it with a special focus on the effects of the blood service’s iron supplementation policy. Low ferritin (< 15 μg/L), an indicator of low iron stores, was present in 20.6% of pre-menopausal women, 10.6% of post-menopausal women and 6% of men. Anemia co-occurred with iron deficiency more frequently in pre-menopausal women (21 out of 25 cases) than in men (3/6) or post-menopausal women (1/2). In multivariable regression analyses, lifestyle, dietary, and blood donation factors explained up to 38% of the variance in ferritin levels but only ~10% of the variance in sTfR levels. Days since previous donation were positively associated with ferritin levels in all groups while the number of donations during the past 2 years was negatively associated with ferritin levels in pre-menopausal women and men. FRCBS-provided iron supplementation was negatively associated with ferritin levels in men only. Relative importance analyses showed that donation activity accounted for most of the explained variance in ferritin levels while iron supplementation explained less than 1%. Variation in ferritin levels was not significantly associated with variation in self-reported health. Donation activity was the most important factor affecting blood donor iron levels, far ahead of e.g. red-meat consumption or iron supplementation. Importantly, self-reported health of donors with lower iron stores was not lower than self-reported health of donors with higher iron stores.

Highlights

  • Recent studies have indicated that blood donation may be associated with iron depletion but only a few studies have systematically scrutinized which donor-related factors predominantly explain this depletion [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The effect of donation activity dwarfs the effect of targeted iron supplementation on blood donor iron stores donors visited donation centers for whole-blood donations regardless of whether the donation attempt succeeded

  • The effect of donation activity dwarfs the effect of targeted iron supplementation on blood donor iron stores missing ferritin, soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) or C-reactive protein (CRP) measurements (N = 7), and donors who did not answer to the items of the questionnaire included in the present data analysis (N = 245)

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Summary

Introduction

Recent studies have indicated that blood donation may be associated with iron depletion but only a few studies have systematically scrutinized which donor-related factors predominantly explain this depletion [1,2,3,4,5]. If left untreated, leads to iron deficient. The effect of donation activity dwarfs the effect of targeted iron supplementation on blood donor iron stores. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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