Iron Deficiency Anemia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical and Biological Predictive Factors of Iron Deficiency Anemia in the Third Trimester of Pregnancy
Iron deficiency anemia is the leading cause of anemia during pregnancy, which can still
reach 10 to 20% of pregnant women in developed countries, with potentially serious
consequences for the child. Systematic iron supplementation remains controversial.
This study aims to identify in the first trimester of pregnancy clinical and biological
predictive factors for the occurrence of iron deficiency anemia in the third trimester of
pregnancy.
Objectives: The main objective is to determine the prevalence of anemia (Hb ≤ 11 g / dl) in
the third trimester of pregnancy (T3) and to identify the predictive factors in the first
trimester (T1).
Type of study: Prospective monocentric cohort.
Experimental plan: Pregnant women are included during the ultrasound of T1. Written consent
will be sought after delivery of the information notice. Hemoglobin, classical iron balance
(ferritin, transferrin saturation coefficient) as well as other original parameters:
hepcidin and the soluble transferrin receptor are assayed. Socioeconomic and clinical
parameters likely to favor an iron deficiency are sought through validated questionnaires.
Nutritional advice, combined with martial supplementation if necessary, is given according
to a standardized management protocol resulting from the current international
recommendations and validated by an internal committee. The prevalence of iron deficiency
anemia is determined at T3 (after 34 SA). The predictive factors for this anemia will be
sought according to the data collected in T1.
The 2012 WHO's recommendations are in favour of a systematic supplementation of pregnant
women. Epidemiological studies show that the anaemia at the end of pregnancy increases the
risk of severe anaemia in the postpartum hospital stay and the frequency of transfusions in
the mother is multiplied by 9. The quality of life of the mother seems too altered by the
anaemia with increased susceptibility to infections, cognitive and emotional disorders in
the postpartum period and a decrease of capacity of work and performance. In the human
new-born, the anaemia is associated with a risk of prematurity, low weight birth and
especially a certain degree of later psycho-motor delay, or even perinatal mortality. Side
effects of iron orally, it's cost, make debatable systematic supplementation as
interventional studies have given contradictory results in terms of morbidity and mortality
infant. In areas where the anaemia prevalence is very high, a systematic supplementation of
pregnant by 60 mg of iron (with folic acid) is beneficial in children on clues of
psycho-intellectual development at 12, 18 and 24 months while multiple supplementation in
micronutrients (containing 30 mg of iron) is not effective. However, systematic
supplementation in countries with high socioeconomic level did debate. An Australian study
Interventional, controlled, randomized conducted at 430 women showed no efficacy on the
intellectual development of children in 4 years, without changing the quality of life of the
mother during pregnancy, the authors observing even an increase of abnormal behaviors of the
children of the mothers in the Group supplemented iron. In another study, the rational is
highly questionable, a treatment by Iron versus placebo was given to pregnant women not
anaemic with a high haemoglobin (an average of 14 g/dl): the women who took iron had high
blood pressure at the end of pregnancy more and their children had a lower birth for the
term weight.
In a developed country such as the France, one can legitimately wonder about the potentially
harmful effects of routine iron supplementation for a population of pregnant women mainly
not anaemic. In Great Britain of the recently published recommendations are pronounced
against a systematic supplementation of iron in pregnant women. Other European authors
advocate focused on the rate of ferritin supplementation. However, we are lacking of studies
allowing, from clinical criteria and biological precise, to better target pregnant women who
could benefit from supplementation of iron in the first quarter.
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