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Targeted Provision of Oral Iron: The Evolution of a Practical Screening Option

Universal oral iron supplementation, undertaken according to 1998 WHO guidelines, produced adverse consequences among some children in malaria-endemic areas. Prompted by the Pemba trial, which revealed excessive hospitalizations and deaths, WHO advised that iron supplementation in such regions be ac...

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Autores principales: Crowley, Caitlin R., Solomons, Noel W., Schümann, Klaus
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Nutrition 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3649727/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22797993
http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/an.111.001149
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author Crowley, Caitlin R.
Solomons, Noel W.
Schümann, Klaus
author_facet Crowley, Caitlin R.
Solomons, Noel W.
Schümann, Klaus
author_sort Crowley, Caitlin R.
collection PubMed
description Universal oral iron supplementation, undertaken according to 1998 WHO guidelines, produced adverse consequences among some children in malaria-endemic areas. Prompted by the Pemba trial, which revealed excessive hospitalizations and deaths, WHO advised that iron supplementation in such regions be accompanied by previous screening for iron deficiency. This agenda, however, poses issues of cost, benefit, acceptability, technical feasibility, and reliability of such screening. The cost of equipment and personnel is balanced against savings from iron supplements spared and treatment for morbidity averted. Costs aside, the most efficacious acceptable screening approach for avoiding hospitalization and deaths must be fielded. Screening before supplementation can be used to assess hematological, iron, and possible inflammatory status to differentiate the source of decreased hemoglobin concentration. Iron deficiency has often been inferred from hematological status markers. The need for extraction of blood, albeit capillary in origin, and high assay costs limit the use of validated methods in screening. Noninvasive methods, i.e., not requiring the extraction of blood, provide the most acceptable and potentially least expensive approach for determining hematological or iron status. Although a noninvasive technique for iron and inflammatory status would be the ideal, it is unattained. Field-friendly, skin-probe hemoglobin devices, derived from instruments for clinical settings, are being developed and tested for eventual rollout in malarial areas. Given a firm grounding for the theoretical requirements needed to advance the screening agenda, evaluation and monitoring of the performance of screening devices can proceed hand in hand.
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spelling pubmed-36497272013-07-01 Targeted Provision of Oral Iron: The Evolution of a Practical Screening Option Crowley, Caitlin R. Solomons, Noel W. Schümann, Klaus Adv Nutr Symposium: Tackling Iron Deficiency and Anemia in Infants and Young Children in Malaria-Endemic Areas: Moving from Controversy towards Guidance for Safe, Effective and Feasible Policies and Programs Universal oral iron supplementation, undertaken according to 1998 WHO guidelines, produced adverse consequences among some children in malaria-endemic areas. Prompted by the Pemba trial, which revealed excessive hospitalizations and deaths, WHO advised that iron supplementation in such regions be accompanied by previous screening for iron deficiency. This agenda, however, poses issues of cost, benefit, acceptability, technical feasibility, and reliability of such screening. The cost of equipment and personnel is balanced against savings from iron supplements spared and treatment for morbidity averted. Costs aside, the most efficacious acceptable screening approach for avoiding hospitalization and deaths must be fielded. Screening before supplementation can be used to assess hematological, iron, and possible inflammatory status to differentiate the source of decreased hemoglobin concentration. Iron deficiency has often been inferred from hematological status markers. The need for extraction of blood, albeit capillary in origin, and high assay costs limit the use of validated methods in screening. Noninvasive methods, i.e., not requiring the extraction of blood, provide the most acceptable and potentially least expensive approach for determining hematological or iron status. Although a noninvasive technique for iron and inflammatory status would be the ideal, it is unattained. Field-friendly, skin-probe hemoglobin devices, derived from instruments for clinical settings, are being developed and tested for eventual rollout in malarial areas. Given a firm grounding for the theoretical requirements needed to advance the screening agenda, evaluation and monitoring of the performance of screening devices can proceed hand in hand. American Society for Nutrition 2012-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3649727/ /pubmed/22797993 http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/an.111.001149 Text en © 2012 American Society for Nutrition This is a free access article, distributed under terms (http://www.nutrition.org/publications/guidelines-and-policies/license/) which permit unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Symposium: Tackling Iron Deficiency and Anemia in Infants and Young Children in Malaria-Endemic Areas: Moving from Controversy towards Guidance for Safe, Effective and Feasible Policies and Programs
Crowley, Caitlin R.
Solomons, Noel W.
Schümann, Klaus
Targeted Provision of Oral Iron: The Evolution of a Practical Screening Option
title Targeted Provision of Oral Iron: The Evolution of a Practical Screening Option
title_full Targeted Provision of Oral Iron: The Evolution of a Practical Screening Option
title_fullStr Targeted Provision of Oral Iron: The Evolution of a Practical Screening Option
title_full_unstemmed Targeted Provision of Oral Iron: The Evolution of a Practical Screening Option
title_short Targeted Provision of Oral Iron: The Evolution of a Practical Screening Option
title_sort targeted provision of oral iron: the evolution of a practical screening option
topic Symposium: Tackling Iron Deficiency and Anemia in Infants and Young Children in Malaria-Endemic Areas: Moving from Controversy towards Guidance for Safe, Effective and Feasible Policies and Programs
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3649727/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22797993
http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/an.111.001149
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