User login
Pregnant women with severe anemia are twice as likely as those without it to die during or shortly after pregnancy, according to research published in The Lancet Global Health.
Previous studies suggested anemia was strongly associated with death, but this was due to other clinical reasons.
For the current study, researchers took into account factors that influence the development of anemia in pregnancy (such as blood loss or malaria infection) and still found a significant association between anemia and death.
“Anemia in pregnancy is one of the most common medical problems pregnant women encounter, both in low- and high-income countries,” said study author Jahnavi Daru, MBBS, from Queen Mary University of London in the UK.
“We’ve now shown that, if a woman develops severe anemia at any point in her pregnancy or in the 7 days after delivery, she is at a higher risk of dying, making urgent treatment even more important.”
To make this discovery, Dr Daru and her colleagues analyzed World Health Organization data on 312,281 pregnancies in 29 countries* across Latin America, Africa, the Western Pacific region, the Eastern Mediterranean, and South East Asia.
There were 4687 cases of severe anemia (a blood count of less than 70 g/L) and 341 deaths in this group. Deaths were included if they occurred any time after hospital admission until the seventh day post-partum or post-discharge.
The researchers matched 4189 of the women with severe anemia to 8218 women without severe anemia and found a significantly increased risk of death among the women with anemia, both in a crude analysis and an analysis adjusted for potential confounding variables.
In the crude analysis, the odds ratio (OR) for death was 43.35 for women with severe anemia (P<0.0001). In the adjusted analysis, the OR was 2.36 (P<0.0001).
The researchers also conducted a propensity score analysis, matching women with severe anemia to their non-anemic counterparts 1:2. In this analysis, the OR for death was 1.86 (P<0.0001) for the women with severe anemia.
“Anemia is a readily treatable condition, but the existing approaches so far have not been able to tackle the problem,” Dr Daru pointed out. “Clinicians, policy makers, and healthcare professionals should now focus their attention on preventing anemia using a multifaceted approach, not just hoping that iron tablets will solve the problem.”
* The countries included were Afghanistan, Angola, Argentina, Brazil, Cambodia, China, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ecuador, India, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Mexico, Mongolia, Nepal, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Palestine, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Qatar, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Uganda, and Vietnam.
Pregnant women with severe anemia are twice as likely as those without it to die during or shortly after pregnancy, according to research published in The Lancet Global Health.
Previous studies suggested anemia was strongly associated with death, but this was due to other clinical reasons.
For the current study, researchers took into account factors that influence the development of anemia in pregnancy (such as blood loss or malaria infection) and still found a significant association between anemia and death.
“Anemia in pregnancy is one of the most common medical problems pregnant women encounter, both in low- and high-income countries,” said study author Jahnavi Daru, MBBS, from Queen Mary University of London in the UK.
“We’ve now shown that, if a woman develops severe anemia at any point in her pregnancy or in the 7 days after delivery, she is at a higher risk of dying, making urgent treatment even more important.”
To make this discovery, Dr Daru and her colleagues analyzed World Health Organization data on 312,281 pregnancies in 29 countries* across Latin America, Africa, the Western Pacific region, the Eastern Mediterranean, and South East Asia.
There were 4687 cases of severe anemia (a blood count of less than 70 g/L) and 341 deaths in this group. Deaths were included if they occurred any time after hospital admission until the seventh day post-partum or post-discharge.
The researchers matched 4189 of the women with severe anemia to 8218 women without severe anemia and found a significantly increased risk of death among the women with anemia, both in a crude analysis and an analysis adjusted for potential confounding variables.
In the crude analysis, the odds ratio (OR) for death was 43.35 for women with severe anemia (P<0.0001). In the adjusted analysis, the OR was 2.36 (P<0.0001).
The researchers also conducted a propensity score analysis, matching women with severe anemia to their non-anemic counterparts 1:2. In this analysis, the OR for death was 1.86 (P<0.0001) for the women with severe anemia.
“Anemia is a readily treatable condition, but the existing approaches so far have not been able to tackle the problem,” Dr Daru pointed out. “Clinicians, policy makers, and healthcare professionals should now focus their attention on preventing anemia using a multifaceted approach, not just hoping that iron tablets will solve the problem.”
* The countries included were Afghanistan, Angola, Argentina, Brazil, Cambodia, China, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ecuador, India, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Mexico, Mongolia, Nepal, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Palestine, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Qatar, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Uganda, and Vietnam.
Pregnant women with severe anemia are twice as likely as those without it to die during or shortly after pregnancy, according to research published in The Lancet Global Health.
Previous studies suggested anemia was strongly associated with death, but this was due to other clinical reasons.
For the current study, researchers took into account factors that influence the development of anemia in pregnancy (such as blood loss or malaria infection) and still found a significant association between anemia and death.
“Anemia in pregnancy is one of the most common medical problems pregnant women encounter, both in low- and high-income countries,” said study author Jahnavi Daru, MBBS, from Queen Mary University of London in the UK.
“We’ve now shown that, if a woman develops severe anemia at any point in her pregnancy or in the 7 days after delivery, she is at a higher risk of dying, making urgent treatment even more important.”
To make this discovery, Dr Daru and her colleagues analyzed World Health Organization data on 312,281 pregnancies in 29 countries* across Latin America, Africa, the Western Pacific region, the Eastern Mediterranean, and South East Asia.
There were 4687 cases of severe anemia (a blood count of less than 70 g/L) and 341 deaths in this group. Deaths were included if they occurred any time after hospital admission until the seventh day post-partum or post-discharge.
The researchers matched 4189 of the women with severe anemia to 8218 women without severe anemia and found a significantly increased risk of death among the women with anemia, both in a crude analysis and an analysis adjusted for potential confounding variables.
In the crude analysis, the odds ratio (OR) for death was 43.35 for women with severe anemia (P<0.0001). In the adjusted analysis, the OR was 2.36 (P<0.0001).
The researchers also conducted a propensity score analysis, matching women with severe anemia to their non-anemic counterparts 1:2. In this analysis, the OR for death was 1.86 (P<0.0001) for the women with severe anemia.
“Anemia is a readily treatable condition, but the existing approaches so far have not been able to tackle the problem,” Dr Daru pointed out. “Clinicians, policy makers, and healthcare professionals should now focus their attention on preventing anemia using a multifaceted approach, not just hoping that iron tablets will solve the problem.”
* The countries included were Afghanistan, Angola, Argentina, Brazil, Cambodia, China, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ecuador, India, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Mexico, Mongolia, Nepal, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Palestine, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Qatar, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Uganda, and Vietnam.