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Malaria is a cause of iron deficiency in African children.

John Muthii MuriukiAlexander J MentzerRuth MitchellEmily L WebbAnthony O EtyangCatherine KyobutungiAlireza MorovatWandia KimitaFrancis M NdunguAlex W MachariaCaroline J NgetsaJohnstone MakaleSwaib Abubaker LuleSolomon K MusaniLaura M RaffieldClare L CutlandSodiomon Bienvenu SirimaAmidou DiarraAlfred B TionoMichal FriedMoses GwamakaSeth Adu-AfarwuahJames P WirthRita WegmüllerShabir A MadhiRobert W SnowAdrian V S HillKirk A RockettManjinder S SandhuDominic P KwiatkowskiAndrew M PrenticeKendra A ByrdAlex NdjebayiChristine P StewartReina Engle-StoneTim J GreenCrystal D KarakochukParminder S SuchdevPhilip BejonPatrick Emmet DuffyGeorge Davey SmithAlison M ElliottThomas N WilliamsSarah H Atkinson
Published in: Nature medicine (2021)
Malaria and iron deficiency (ID) are common and interrelated public health problems in African children. Observational data suggest that interrupting malaria transmission reduces the prevalence of ID1. To test the hypothesis that malaria might cause ID, we used sickle cell trait (HbAS, rs334 ), a genetic variant that confers specific protection against malaria2, as an instrumental variable in Mendelian randomization analyses. HbAS was associated with a 30% reduction in ID among children living in malaria-endemic countries in Africa (n = 7,453), but not among individuals living in malaria-free areas (n = 3,818). Genetically predicted malaria risk was associated with an odds ratio of 2.65 for ID per unit increase in the log incidence rate of malaria. This suggests that an intervention that halves the risk of malaria episodes would reduce the prevalence of ID in African children by 49%.
Keyphrases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • public health
  • young adults
  • iron deficiency
  • risk factors
  • randomized controlled trial
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • dna methylation
  • big data
  • global health