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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Human Nutrition Laboratory, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zürich (MBZ, FS-A, and RFH); the Department for Growth and Development, University Childrens Hospital, Zürich (LM); the Ministry of Health, Rabat, Morocco (NC); and the Ministry of Health, Abidjan, Côte dIvoire (PA)
Background: Although transferrin receptor (TfR) and zinc protoporphyrin (ZnPP) are often used to define iron status in school-age children in developing countries, the diagnostic cutoffs for this age group are uncertain.
Objective: The objective was to determine the sensitivity and specificity of TfR and ZnPP in predicting iron deficiency in black and white children in Africa.
Design: Hemoglobin, C-reactive protein (CRP), serum ferritin (SF), TfR, and ZnPP were measured in children in Côte dIvoire and Morocco. We excluded children with elevated CRP and then used receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves to evaluate TfR and ZnPP alone and in combination in screening for iron deficiency, defined as an SF concentration <15 µg/L, and iron deficiency anemia (IDA), defined as an SF concentration <15 µg/L and low hemoglobin.
Results: The sample included 2814 children aged 515 y. The sensitivity and specificity of TfR and ZnPP were limited by considerable overlap between iron-sufficient, nonanemic children and those with IDA. On the basis of ROC curves, we identified diagnostic cutoffs for TfR and ZnPP that achieved specificities and sensitivities of
6080%. Separate cutoffs for Côte dIvoire and Morocco gave the best performance; the cutoffs for both TfR and ZnPP were higher in Côte dIvoire. Moreover, a comparison of nonanemic, iron-sufficient subjects showed that Ivorian children had significantly higher TfR and ZnPP concentrations than did Moroccan children (P < 0.01).
Conclusions: New diagnostic cutoffs for TfR and ZnPP, based on ROC curve analyses, may improve the performance of these indexes in defining iron status in children. Significant ethnic differences in TfR and ZnPP suggest that separate cutoffs may be needed for black and white children.
Key Words: Iron iron deficiency hemoglobin zinc protoporphyrin transferrin receptor serum ferritin receiver operating characteristic curve school children anemia
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