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Iron deficiency and fatigue in inflammatory bowel disease: a systematic review

Iron deficiency and fatigue in inflammatory bowel disease: a systematic review
Iron deficiency and fatigue in inflammatory bowel disease: a systematic review
Background: it is unclear what impact iron deficiency has on fatigue in people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This systematic review examined the evidence of whether iron deficiency, with or without anaemia, was associated with fatigue in IBD. Fatigue is a common symptom in patients with IBD that can be difficult to manage and treat. A greater understanding of the role and contribution of iron deficiency to fatigue may help improve the management of this condition.

Methods: the databases searched were MEDLINE, OVID, CINAHL and Web of Science. Inclusion criteria were studies measuring iron status for iron deficiency (ID) and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) for fatigue in patients with IBD of any level of disease activity. Assessment of bias was conducted using the Newcastle Ottawa Scale. Studies were grouped for syntheses according to whether exposure was iron deficiency without anaemia (IDWA) or ID regardless of haemoglobin level.

Results: two hundred and eighty-five individual database results were identified and screened; 32 complete records were reviewed, from which seven studies with 1425 individuals were deemed eligible for inclusion in the results synthesis. Considerable variation in the methods and statistical analysis used to investigate the relationship between ID and fatigue prevented any quantitative synthesis. Studies varied by population disease activity levels, approaches used to define ID and PROMs used to measure fatigue. Three studies directly compared fatigue scores in IDWA to those not iron deficient, two of which showed patients with IDWA had significantly lower fatigue scores. Four studies used ID irrespective of anaemia as the exposure and reported mixed results on fatigue, with only one study reporting a higher prevalence of fatigue in the ID group.

Conclusions: there was marked heterogeneity between studies in this review. Two studies found evidence of a slight increase in fatigue levels in patients with IDWA. Though this does not explain all fatigue in patients with IBD, iron replacement should be considered to improve fatigue in iron-deficient patients.
1932-6203
Sartain, Stephanie Clare
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Al-Ezairej, Maryam
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Mcdonnell, Martin
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Westoby, Catherine
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Katarachia, Vasiliki
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Wootton, Stephen A.
bf47ef35-0b33-4edb-a2b0-ceda5c475c0c
Cummings, J.R. Fraser
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Sartain, Stephanie Clare
6e33dd2d-b6dd-4aaa-949f-5130984626a9
Al-Ezairej, Maryam
c3ba7c5c-2f42-4644-8423-267b6d408059
Mcdonnell, Martin
9a38a172-6b0b-4a6a-ad20-bd2de5cb0ec4
Westoby, Catherine
f2316025-cf65-4c21-9324-ff7dc9e033c3
Katarachia, Vasiliki
b6773713-8e28-4ed2-8bf2-f03fa39f279d
Wootton, Stephen A.
bf47ef35-0b33-4edb-a2b0-ceda5c475c0c
Cummings, J.R. Fraser
9e0868f8-6980-4925-b474-345e478066b4

Sartain, Stephanie Clare, Al-Ezairej, Maryam, Mcdonnell, Martin, Westoby, Catherine, Katarachia, Vasiliki, Wootton, Stephen A. and Cummings, J.R. Fraser (2025) Iron deficiency and fatigue in inflammatory bowel disease: a systematic review. PLoS ONE, 20 (1), [e0304293].

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: it is unclear what impact iron deficiency has on fatigue in people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This systematic review examined the evidence of whether iron deficiency, with or without anaemia, was associated with fatigue in IBD. Fatigue is a common symptom in patients with IBD that can be difficult to manage and treat. A greater understanding of the role and contribution of iron deficiency to fatigue may help improve the management of this condition.

Methods: the databases searched were MEDLINE, OVID, CINAHL and Web of Science. Inclusion criteria were studies measuring iron status for iron deficiency (ID) and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) for fatigue in patients with IBD of any level of disease activity. Assessment of bias was conducted using the Newcastle Ottawa Scale. Studies were grouped for syntheses according to whether exposure was iron deficiency without anaemia (IDWA) or ID regardless of haemoglobin level.

Results: two hundred and eighty-five individual database results were identified and screened; 32 complete records were reviewed, from which seven studies with 1425 individuals were deemed eligible for inclusion in the results synthesis. Considerable variation in the methods and statistical analysis used to investigate the relationship between ID and fatigue prevented any quantitative synthesis. Studies varied by population disease activity levels, approaches used to define ID and PROMs used to measure fatigue. Three studies directly compared fatigue scores in IDWA to those not iron deficient, two of which showed patients with IDWA had significantly lower fatigue scores. Four studies used ID irrespective of anaemia as the exposure and reported mixed results on fatigue, with only one study reporting a higher prevalence of fatigue in the ID group.

Conclusions: there was marked heterogeneity between studies in this review. Two studies found evidence of a slight increase in fatigue levels in patients with IDWA. Though this does not explain all fatigue in patients with IBD, iron replacement should be considered to improve fatigue in iron-deficient patients.

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journal.pone.0304293 - Version of Record
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Download (680kB)

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 December 2024
Published date: 13 January 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505649
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505649
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: a955091b-2d3e-4310-8e28-b896c1e88597

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Date deposited: 15 Oct 2025 16:40
Last modified: 15 Oct 2025 16:40

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Contributors

Author: Stephanie Clare Sartain
Author: Maryam Al-Ezairej
Author: Martin Mcdonnell
Author: Catherine Westoby
Author: Vasiliki Katarachia
Author: J.R. Fraser Cummings

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