|
|
||||||||
ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the International Health Institute (TL, GCL, STMG, JDK, and JFF), the Department of Pediatrics (TL and JFF), the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (JDK), and the Center for Statistical Sciences (LS), Brown University, Providence, RI; the Department of Immunology, Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, the Philippine Department of Health, Manila, Philippines (LPA, DLM, and RMO)
2 Supported by grants no. RO1AI48123 and K23AI52125 from the National Institutes of Health. 3 Reprints not available. Address correspondence to T Leenstra, Department of Pediatrics and the Center for International Health Research, Brown University Medical School, 55 Claverick Street, Providence, RI 02903. E-mail: tjalling_leenstra{at}brown.edu.
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Objectives: By evaluating the cross-sectional relation between the intensity of Schistosoma japonicum infection, hemoglobin concentration, and iron status in 730-y-old persons from S. japonicumendemic rice-farming villages in the province of Leyte, Philippines, we assessed the relative contribution of iron deficiency and anemia of inflammation to schistosomiasis-associated anemia.
Design: We enrolled 627 S. japonicuminfected and 111 S. japonicumuninfected persons. We obtained stool samples to quantify S. japonicum infection and venous blood samples for hemograms and measures of iron status and inflammation.
Results: Intensity of S. japonicum infection was independently associated with hemoglobin (ß = 0.24; 95% CI: 0.31, 0.17). Persons with high-intensity infection had a greater risk of iron deficiency anemia (adjusted prevalence odds ratio: 6.6; 95% CI: 2.9, 14.7), but there was no evidence of this relation in low-intensity infections. In contrast, anemia without iron deficiency was prevalent across all intensities (adjusted prevalence odds ratio: 3.8; 95% CI: 1.5, 9.5).
Conclusions: Storage iron deficiency is a major contributor to anemia in high-intensity S. japonicum infection. A high prevalence of anemia without iron deficiency, exclusion of other mechanisms of anemia, and the evidence of low bioavailable iron suggest that anemia of inflammation contributes to S. japonicumassociated anemia at all infection intensities.
Key Words: Schistosoma japonicum anemia iron deficiency anemia of inflammation Philippines
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
200 million are infected at any given time (1, 2). Schistosoma japonicum infects
2.4 million persons, and 70 million are at risk of infection, mainly in China and Southeast Asia (2). Evidence from cross-sectional studies and randomized controlled trials supports a relation between schistosomiasis and anemia, but little is known regarding the mechanisms of this relation (1, 3, 4). A recent meta-analysis reassessing the global burden of disease due to schistosomiasis posited anemia as a major contributor to the disease-specific disability of schistosomiasis (4). S. japonicum may cause intestinal blood loss and subsequent iron deficiency (ID) as eggs pass through the intestinal wall into the lumen of the gut. However, there is little evidence that the quantity of blood lost is sufficient to produce ID and anemia in the context of S. japonicum, except possibly at higher infection intensities (5, 6). Few studies have reported an association between schistosome-egg counts and decreased iron stores (7, 8), but the traditional markers of iron status used in these studies (ie, ferritin and erythrocyte protoporphyrin) are influenced by inflammation, which complicates their interpretation. Moreover, because poverty increases the risk of both schistosomiasis and dietary ID, studies that do not adjust for socioeconomic status (SES) may be confounded by poor iron intakes.
Schistosomiasis also may produce anemia by inducing a proinflammatory cytokine-mediated dyserythropoiesis, as seen in anemia of inflammation (AI) (9, 10). Anemia in the setting of acute or chronic inflammation is mediated by decreased erythropoietin production or responsiveness of erythrocyte precursors in the bone marrow (or both), decreased erythrocyte life span, shunting of bioavailable iron to storage forms, and, possibly, reduced uptake of dietary iron in the gut. In addition to AI, schistosomiasis may produce anemia secondary to increased sequestration of erythrocytes or increased hemolysis in the spleen of persons with schistosomiasis-associated splenomegaly (or both) (1113).
The objectives of this study were to assess the association between S. japonicum and hemoglobin after adjustment for potential confounders and to explore mechanisms mediating this relation, including ID and aberrations in iron metabolism mediated by inflammation, in a cross-sectional sample of 730-y-old inhabitants of the province of Leyte, Philippines. We hypothesized that mechanisms other than extracorporeal blood lossin particular, AIcontribute to schistosomiasis-associated anemia.
| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
100 control subjects was obtained. Participants were enrolled in 2 separate cohorts, in October 2002 and April 2003. They were scheduled to come to the field laboratory on a designated day, and they were transported by study staff. All participation rates and analyses include the entire sample of uninfected and infected persons unless stated otherwise. Written informed consent was obtained from each adult participant or from the parents of assenting children. The study was approved by the institutional review boards of Brown University and The Philippines Research Institute of Tropical Medicine.
Stool examination
Parasite burden was determined by examination of 3 consecutive stool specimens obtained from each study participant. Each of the 3 stool specimens was examined in duplicate for S. japonicum, Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura, and hookworm by the Kato-Katz method within 24 h of collection. For each of the stool specimens, the average number of eggs per gram (epg) of the duplicate test was ascertained. The overall mean epg was derived by averaging the parasite burden of the 3 individual specimens. Intensity of infection for each helminth was determined by using the following World Health Organization (WHO) criteria: low-, medium-, and high-intensity S. japonicum infection was defined as 199, 100399, and
400 epg, respectively; low-, medium-, and high-intensity A. lumbricoides infection was defined as 14999, 500049 999, and
50 000 epg, respectively; low-, medium-, and high-intensity T. trichiura infection was defined as 1999, 10009999 and
10 000 epg, respectively; and low-, medium-, and high-intensity hookworm infection was defined as 11999, 20003999, and
4000 epg, respectively (14, 15). For 10 hookworm larvae, obtained by culturing stool samples (16) from 203 study participants, the species was identified by using polymerase chain reaction; only Necator americanus species were detected.
Blood collection and processing
Venipuncture was performed and blood was collected into Vacutainer tubes (Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ) containing EDTA as anticoagulant (for hemogram) or serum separator gel (for serum assays). A complete hemogram (white and red blood cell counts, hemoglobin, hematocrit, mean corpuscular volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, and platelet and lymphocyte counts and percentage) was obtained by using a Serono Baker 9000 hematology analyzer (Serono Baker Diagnostics, Allentown, PA). The hematology analyzer was maintained in compliance with College of American Pathologists' guidelines, which include daily controls and necessary calibration. Serum samples were aliquoted and stored at 80 °C. Serum ferritin (SF), serum transferrin receptor (sTfR), C-reactive protein (CRP), and interleukin 6 (IL-6) were analyzed on a multianalyte Bio-Plex analyzer (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) by using in-houseproduced sandwich- or competitive-style bead kits and commercial controls as described previously (17). Total and direct bilirubin assays were conducted with the use of commercial kits (Thermo DMA, Louisville, CO), as a measure of hemolysis. The bead assay kits showed < 2% interanalyte interference, and the median interassay CV was 15% as assessed with 48 replicate controls on consecutive plates.
Definitions
Anemia was defined on the basis of age- and sex-specific hemoglobin cutoffs recommended by the WHO (18): hemoglobin < 11.5 g/dL for children aged < 12 y, < 12 g/dL for children aged 1214 y and nonpregnant females
15 y, and < 13 g/dL for males aged
15 y. Mild, moderate, and severe anemia were defined as hemoglobin concentrations below the WHO cutoff but
9 g/dL,
7 but < 9 g/dL, and < 7 g/dL, respectively. ID was defined as SF < 12 ng/mL for persons aged < 15 y and women of all ages and SF < 18 ng/mL for men aged
15 y. Iron-deficient anemia (IDA) was defined as anemia with concurrent ID. Non-iron-deficient anemia (NIDA) was defined as anemia without concurrent iron deficiency. IL-6 responders were defined as persons with detectable concentrations of IL-6 (>1.45 pg/mL) in serum. Menstruation was defined as having reported a first day of last menstrual period at enrollment.
Socioeconomic status
Individual SES scores were based on questionnaire data on parental and child educational status, occupational status, ownership status of home or land, and other assets. The questionnaire had good internal consistency with a Cronbach's alpha of 82.4% for all questions. A summary SES score composed of all questionnaire items was calculated by using principal components analysis to appropriately weight questionnaire items, as described by Filmer and Pritchett (19). Because of missing data, it was not possible to calculate a summary SES score for 84 persons. For those subjects, SES scores were imputed from scores of another person from the same household, if available, or of the overall mean score of persons of the same age and sex if a household value was not available.
Ultrasound
Study subjects were evaluated with the use of ultrasound on a Hitachi EUB-200 with a 3.5-Mhz probe (Hitachi Medical Corp, Tokyo, Japan). Spleen size was measured (in cm) in the left intercostal oblique view. Reference measurements for spleen size among healthy Filipinos were not available, and hence normal values from a healthy Chinese population were used (20). Splenomegaly was defined as > 2 SDs above the mean.
Data management and statistical analyses
Data forms collected in the field were bar-coded and entered with the use of FILEMAKER software (version 5.5; Filemaker Inc, Santa Clara, CA). Normality diagnostics were performed, and nonnormally distributed variables, including egg counts, and measurements of SF, sTfR, CRP, and unconjugated bilirubin were loge transformed [Ln (value + 1)]. All final analyses were performed with the use of SAS software (version 8.02; SAS Institute, Cary, NC). P values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant.
A significant proportion of the variance in our outcome measures was attributable to clustering within households. Therefore, multilevel statistical analyses were used to adjust for clustering at the household level. Specifically, multivariate random-intercept models were implemented by using PROC MIXED (with household as random effect and with the use of a compound symmetry correlation matrix) for continuous outcomes, and generalized estimating equation models were implemented by using PROC GENMOD (with household as repeated effect and with the use of a compound symmetry correlation matrix) for dichotomous outcomes. Unconditional models were used to estimate the intraclass correlation and descriptive measures (means and proportions) adjusted for the nonindependence of observations within households. For all measures, the empirical (robust) SEs are reported to protect against misspecification of the correlation matrix. Least-squares mean values represent the mean adjusted for confounders in multivariable models.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
: 13.5 and 15.6 y, respectively; P = 0.072) and more likely to be male (prevalence of severe anemia: 2.9% in males and 0.4% in females; P = 0.035) than were those without severe anemia; ie, only one female had severe anemia. SES was a strong determinant of hemoglobin concentration, independent of age and sex (adjusted linear regression: ß = 0.44; P < 0.0001).
Hemoglobin, red cell indexes, and S. japonicum intensity
As previously described for this study population (21), the intensity of the S. japonicum infection had a significant negative association with hemoglobin concentration, independent of age, sex, menstrual status, SES, splenomegaly, and hookworm infection (adjusted linear regression: ß = 0.24; 95% CI: 0.31, 0.17; Figure 1
). Furthermore, this negative association corresponded with an increase in the prevalence of anemia (Figure 2
). It is notable that the increased prevalence of anemia in persons with high-intensity infection was largely due to an increased prevalence of severe anemia [adjusted prevalence odds ratio: 10.5; 95% CI: 3.2, 34.6 (comparing high-intensity infection to negative or low- or medium-intensity groups pooled)].
|
|
Iron-deficiency anemia and S. japonicum
Measures of iron status were available for 727 subjects (98.5%). As expected, SF was positively correlated with CRP, even after adjustment for intensity of S. japonicum infection (R2 = 0.06, P < 0.0001). The overall prevalence of ID was high (18.6%). Of the anemic subjects, 36.3% were iron deficient; of that subgroup, 61.7% were anemic. Of the 14 severely anemic subjects, 11 (84.6%) were classified as iron deficient. Inflammation (CRP > 8.2 µg/mL) was prevalent (25.4%), and therefore the reported prevalences of ID likely were underestimated. Adjusted mean hemoglobin concentration in the IDA group was 9.1 g/dL (95% CI: 8.4, 9.7 g/dL) after adjustment for age, sex, menstruation, SES, splenomegaly, and concurrent hookworm infection.
The positive association between S. japonicum intensity as a continuous variable and IDA described a quadratic function (2 log likelihood ratio test, P = 0.043). IDA was
4 times more prevalent in the high-intensity S. japonicum group than in the negative or low- or medium-intensity groups when pooled (adjusted prevalence ratio: 6.6; 95% CI: 2.9, 14.7; Figure 3
). IDA was more prevalent in the medium-intensity S. japonicum group than in the low-intensity group (adjusted prevalence odds ratio: 1.9; 95% CI: 1.0, 3.6; Figure 3
).
|
Non-iron-deficient anemia and S. japonicum
The adjusted mean hemoglobin concentration in the NIDA group was 10.2 g/dL (95% CI: 9.7, 10.8 g/dL) after adjustment for age, sex, menstruation, SES, splenomegaly, and concurrent hookworm infection. NIDA was significantly more prevalent in S. japonicuminfected persons than in S. japonicumuninfected persons (adjusted prevalence odds ratio: 3.8; 95% CI: 1.5, 9.5; Figure 3
). Moreover, there was a significant linear relation between NIDA prevalence and S. japonicum intensity when assessed as a continuous variable, even after exclusion of uninfected subjects from the analysis (adjusted log odds increase per log epg change: 0.27; 95% CI: 0.12, 0.41). None of the geohelminth infections (hookworm, T. trichiura, or A. lumbricoides) was associated with differences in prevalence of NIDA, and none was a confounder of any of the above associations (data not shown).
Serum transferrin receptor, inflammation, and S. japonicum
Mean sTfR concentrations were significantly higher in S. japonicuminfected subjects than in S. japonicumuninfected subjects, but no significant differences between S. japonicum intensity groups were observed (Figure 4
). However, there was a linear relation between sTfR and intensity of infection as a continuous measure, even after exclusion of the uninfected and the high-intensity groups from analysis and after adjustment for SF (adjusted linear regression: ß = 0.05; 95% CI: 0.01, 0.08). On average, sTfR was higher in subjects with NIDA than in nonanemic subjects (adjusted mean difference: 993; 95% CI: 365, 1695) and in subjects with IDA than in subjects with NIDA (adjusted mean difference: 1887; 95% CI: 693, 3294).
|
Splenomegaly and intensity of S. japonicum infection
Spleen size was determined by ultrasound in 731 subjects. Overall, 12 subjects (1.7%) had an enlarged spleen, and all were infected with S. japonicum. Splenomegaly was significantly more common in subjects with high-intensity infection than in the pooled group of those with negative or low- or medium-intensity infection (adjusted prevalence odds ratio: 4.1; 95% CI: 1.12, 14.70). Subjects with splenomegaly had significantly lower hemoglobin concentrations than did those with normal-size spleens, even after adjustment for intensity of S. japonicum infection, age, sex, menstruation, SES, and hookworm infection (adjusted mean difference: 2.5; 95% CI: 4.0, 1.0). Splenomegaly was not associated with ID or mean differences in sTfR (data not shown). It also was not associated with any difference in mean unconjugated bilirubin, and none of the participants had hyperbilirubinemia (unconjugated bilirubin > 1 mg/dL) (data not shown).
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To assess whether S. japonicum infection leads to decreased iron stores, a mechanism generally thought to be central in the etiology of schistosomiasis-related anemia, we evaluated differences in the prevalence of IDA across infection intensities. We detected a markedly greater prevalence of IDA in subjects with high-intensity S. japonicum infection and a slightly greater prevalence in subjects with medium-intensity S. japonicum infection than in those with low-intensity infection. There was no evidence for increased prevalence of IDA in most (61.2%) of the S. japonicuminfected subjects. In contrast, prevalence of anemia not explained by iron deficiency (ie, NIDA) was significantly higher in all S. japonicuminfected subjects than in S. japonicumuninfected subjects. Taken together, these data suggest that decreased iron stores, due to extracorporeal blood loss or impaired absorption of iron in the intestine (or both), may contribute to anemia in the more intense infections but not in most (predominantly low-intensity) infections. ID did not explain most of the S. japonicumassociated anemia in this study population.
We found no evidence of increased hemolysis in persons with schistosomiasis. Splenomegaly occurred in only 1.7% of our study sample, and therefore sequestration could not account for most of the S. japonicumassociated anemia. Clinically relevant hereditary hemoglobinopathies are probably uncommon in our study area (23, 24). Vitamin A deficiency is a known contributor to anemia (25), but tissue retinol concentration is not influenced by S. japonicum infection (26), which excludes schistosomiasis-induced vitamin A deficiency as a contributing mechanism. Only one subject in this population had macrocytosis, which excludes vitamin B-12 and folate deficiency as a potential cause of anemia. The prevalence of anemia was higher in males than in females. Many studies have noted that men are more susceptible to schistosomiasis-related morbidity, including undernutrition and hepatic fibrosis, than are women (17, 21, 27, 28), possibly as a result of sex-dependent immune responses (29, 30). The lack of evidence for potential contributing factors of anemia other than ID suggests that processes involved in AI may be involved in the etiology of S. japonicumassociated anemia in this population.
We found a significant association between the intensity of S. japonicum infection and the mean sTfR concentration, independent of SF. sTfR correlates closely with its expression on the cell surface of red cell precursors. Elevated sTfR concentrations are found in 3 instances: ID, which is due to either depleted stores (ie, storage ID) or decreased availability of iron at the site of erythropoiesis independent of iron stores (ie, functional ID, such as that due to impaired iron mobilization in AI); increased numbers of erythrocyte precursors (hemolytic disorders including hereditary hemoglobinopathies); and megaloblastic macrocytic anemias (31, 32).
Megaloblastic macrocytic anemia and hemolysis were excluded in this population, which suggests that the dose-response relation between sTfR and S. japonicum intensity reflects ID. The significantly elevated mean sTfR in the subgroup with anemia when ID was excluded as a cause suggests that, rather than storage iron deficiency, elevated sTfR concentrations in this subgroup reflect functional ID. Impaired iron mobilization and utilization, even in the presence of adequate iron stores, is one of the cardinal features of AI (9, 10). Also supporting this conclusion is evidence such as the significantly higher mean sTfR concentration in IL-6 responders than in nonresponders and the parallel associations between S. japonicum infection and mean sTfR and between S. japonicum infection and the prevalence of IL-6 responders (Figure 4
). Recently, IL-6 has been implicated as the key regulator of hepcidin, a hepatocyte-derived protein that mediates AI by regulating iron release from intestinal cells, which regulates iron absorption, and reticuloendothelial cells, which regulates iron availability in the bone marrow (22, 33, 34).
We acknowledge several limitations of the current study. First, the cross-sectional design of our study remains susceptible to residual confounding by measured factors such as SES and by unmeasured factors such as dietary iron intake. Second, the measurement of iron status in the setting of chronic inflammation remains suboptimal because of the artifactual elevation of SF during inflammation. Because the prevalence of ID, defined by using a simple SF cutoff, is invariably underestimated in the setting of prevalent inflammation, it is generally recommended that persons with an elevated CRP concentration be excluded when estimations of the prevalence of ID are being formed (18). Although of use for population estimates, this strategy may lead to additional (and difficult-to-interpret) misclassification, when groups with different magnitudes of inflammation are compared (ie, iron-replete persons may be excluded differentially). Moreover, the inflamed subgroup is of considerable interest to our analyses, and exclusion of this group would have led to a biased representation, Therefore, to aid interpretation, we present a unadjusted definition of ID together with the prevalence and magnitude of inflammation in each subgroup. An alternative definition of ID [ie, using a higher SF cutoff of 50 ng/mL for persons with inflammation (35)] led to the same conclusions (data not shown). Finally, the diagnosis of AI, for which no gold-standard diagnostic test exists, is made on the basis of exclusion of other causes, which makes it impossible to present direct evidence of the phenomenon. In addition, because it is plausible that AI and ID occur simultaneouslyand, in our analyses, subjects with both were classified as having IDAwe were unable to evaluate the full contribution of AI to S. japonicumassociated anemia.
In conclusion, our findings underscore anemia as an important manifestation of chronic S. japonicum infection, even in low-intensity infection. On the basis of the lack of evidence for ID as the central cause of anemia associated with schistosomiasis of low or medium intensity, the exclusion of other potential causes of anemia, and the effects of S. japonicum infection on functional iron status, we conclude that AI is an important contributor to S. japonicumassociated anemia. Our findings have critical public health ramifications because iron therapy in the context of AI may have a significantly reduced clinical efficacy. We believe that these findings support a clinical trial of combination therapy for schistosomiasis and anemia to identify optimal treatment strategies and regimens.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
JFF and JDK were responsible for the study design. JDK, DLM, and GCL were responsible for the laboratory work. JFF, JDK, LPA, DLM, RMO, and STMG were responsible for the data collection. TL and LS were responsible for data analysis. TL, JFF, and JDK were responsible for interpretation of results and writing of the manuscript, with contributions from all other authors. None of the authors had any personal or financial conflict of interest.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
C. H. King and M. Dangerfield-Cha The unacknowledged impact of chronic schistosomiasis Chronic Illness, March 1, 2008; 4(1): 65 - 79. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
K. Tolentino and J. F. Friedman An Update on Anemia in Less Developed Countries Am J Trop Med Hyg, July 1, 2007; 77(1): 44 - 51. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
H. M. Coutinho, T. Leenstra, L. P. Acosta, R. M. Olveda, S. T. McGarvey, J. F. Friedman, and J. D. Kurtis Higher Serum Concentrations of DHEAS Predict Improved Nutritional Status in Helminth-Infected Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults in Leyte, the Philippines J. Nutr., February 1, 2007; 137(2): 433 - 439. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
T. Leenstra, H. M. Coutinho, L. P. Acosta, G. C. Langdon, L. Su, R. M. Olveda, S. T. McGarvey, J. D. Kurtis, and J. F. Friedman Schistosoma japonicum Reinfection after Praziquantel Treatment Causes Anemia Associated with Inflammation Infect. Immun., November 1, 2006; 74(11): 6398 - 6407. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
H. M. COUTINHO, T. LEENSTRA, L. P. ACOSTA, L. SU, B. JARILLA, M. A. JIZ, G. C. LANGDON, R. M. OLVEDA, S. T. MCGARVEY, J. D. KURTIS, et al. PRO-INFLAMMATORY CYTOKINES AND C-REACTIVE PROTEIN ARE ASSOCIATED WITH UNDERNUTRITION IN THE CONTEXT OF SCHISTOSOMA JAPONICUM INFECTION. Am J Trop Med Hyg, October 1, 2006; 75(4): 720 - 726. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |