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Effect of iron supplementation on haemoglobin response in children: systematic review of randomised controlled trials

Effect of iron supplementation on haemoglobin response in children: systematic review of randomised controlled trials
Effect of iron supplementation on haemoglobin response in children: systematic review of randomised controlled trials
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of iron supplementation on haemoglobin (Hb) in children through a systematic review of randomised controlled trials. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Electronic databases, personal files, hand search of reviews, bibliographies of books, and abstracts and proceedings of international conferences were reviewed. Randomised controlled trials evaluating change in Hb levels with interventions that included oral or parenteral iron supplementation or iron-fortified formula milk or cereals were analysed. RESULTS: A total of 55 trials (56 cohorts) provided relevant information. Publication bias was evident (P < 0.001). The pooled estimate (random-effects model) for change in Hb with iron supplementation (weighted mean difference) was 0.74 g/dL (95% CI, 0.61-0.87; P < 0.001; P < 0.001 for heterogeneity). Lower baseline Hb level, oral medicinal iron supplementation, and malarial nonhyperendemic region were significant predictors of greater Hb response and heterogeneity. Projections suggested that, on average, between 37.9% and 62.3% of baseline anaemia (Hb <11 g/dL) was responsive to iron supplementation among children under 6 years of age; the corresponding range for malarial hyperendemic regions was 5.8% to 31.8%. CONCLUSIONS: This systematic review indicates that iron supplementation increases Hb levels in children significantly but modestly. The increase is greater in subjects who are anaemic at the start of the trial and lower in malarial hyperendemic areas and in those consuming iron-fortified food. The projected reductions in prevalence of anaemia with iron supplementation alone highlight the need for additional area-specific interventions, particularly in malaria-prone regions.
0277-2116
468-486
Gera, Tarun
15530368-f679-4c76-a7b6-365c48339f2b
Sachdev, H.P.S.
8667f0cc-a69a-4f5d-b140-14e06edd7894
Nestel, Penelope
64dfcf3f-2e0f-4653-9fdf-1a48f1c99a1e
Sachdev, Sudeep Singh
1ada5d0d-2882-46b6-b754-59e5d9122475
Gera, Tarun
15530368-f679-4c76-a7b6-365c48339f2b
Sachdev, H.P.S.
8667f0cc-a69a-4f5d-b140-14e06edd7894
Nestel, Penelope
64dfcf3f-2e0f-4653-9fdf-1a48f1c99a1e
Sachdev, Sudeep Singh
1ada5d0d-2882-46b6-b754-59e5d9122475

Gera, Tarun, Sachdev, H.P.S., Nestel, Penelope and Sachdev, Sudeep Singh (2007) Effect of iron supplementation on haemoglobin response in children: systematic review of randomised controlled trials. Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, 44 (4), 468-486.

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of iron supplementation on haemoglobin (Hb) in children through a systematic review of randomised controlled trials. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Electronic databases, personal files, hand search of reviews, bibliographies of books, and abstracts and proceedings of international conferences were reviewed. Randomised controlled trials evaluating change in Hb levels with interventions that included oral or parenteral iron supplementation or iron-fortified formula milk or cereals were analysed. RESULTS: A total of 55 trials (56 cohorts) provided relevant information. Publication bias was evident (P < 0.001). The pooled estimate (random-effects model) for change in Hb with iron supplementation (weighted mean difference) was 0.74 g/dL (95% CI, 0.61-0.87; P < 0.001; P < 0.001 for heterogeneity). Lower baseline Hb level, oral medicinal iron supplementation, and malarial nonhyperendemic region were significant predictors of greater Hb response and heterogeneity. Projections suggested that, on average, between 37.9% and 62.3% of baseline anaemia (Hb <11 g/dL) was responsive to iron supplementation among children under 6 years of age; the corresponding range for malarial hyperendemic regions was 5.8% to 31.8%. CONCLUSIONS: This systematic review indicates that iron supplementation increases Hb levels in children significantly but modestly. The increase is greater in subjects who are anaemic at the start of the trial and lower in malarial hyperendemic areas and in those consuming iron-fortified food. The projected reductions in prevalence of anaemia with iron supplementation alone highlight the need for additional area-specific interventions, particularly in malaria-prone regions.

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Published date: April 2007

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61137
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61137
ISSN: 0277-2116
PURE UUID: 990df186-717a-489c-b1ec-ef572fcb7ba8

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Date deposited: 03 Oct 2008
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 21:14

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Contributors

Author: Tarun Gera
Author: H.P.S. Sachdev
Author: Penelope Nestel
Author: Sudeep Singh Sachdev

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