|
|
||||||||
Original Research Communication |
1 From the Laboratory for Human Nutrition, Institute of Food Science, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Rüschlikon, Switzerland, and Instituto de Investigacion Nutricional, Lima, Peru.
2 Supported by the International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna (project PER/7/003). 3 Reprints not available. Address correspondence to L Davidsson, Laboratory for Human Nutrition, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, PO Box 474, CH-8803 Rüschlikon, Switzerland. E-mail: davidsson{at}ilw.agrl.ethz.ch.
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Objective: We evaluated whether iron absorption from a school breakfast meal was improved by increasing the ascorbic acid content or by adding an alternative enhancer of iron absorption, Na2EDTA.
Design: In a crossover design, iron absorption from test meals was evaluated by erythrocyte incorporation of 58Fe and 57Fe. The test meals (wheat bread and a drink containing cereal, milk, and soy) contained 14 mg added Fe (as ferrous sulfate) including 2.02.6 mg 58Fe or 4.07.0 mg 57Fe.
Results: Geometric mean iron absorption increased significantly from 5.1% to 8.2% after the molar ratio of ascorbic acid to fortification iron was increased from 0.6:1 to 1.6:1 (P < 0.01; n = 9). Geometric mean iron absorption increased significantly from 2.9% to 3.8%, from 2.2% to 3.5%, and from 2.4% to 3.7% after addition of Na2EDTA at molar ratios relative to fortification iron of 0.3:1, 0.7:1, and 1:1, respectively, compared with test meals containing no added enhancers (P < 0.01; n = 10 for all). Iron absorption after addition of ascorbic acid (molar ratio 0.6:1) was not significantly different from that after addition of Na2EDTA (molar ratio 0.7:1).
Conclusions: Ascorbic acid and Na2EDTA did not differ significantly in their enhancing effects on iron absorption at molar ratios of 0.6:1 to 0.7:1 relative to fortification iron. Additional ascorbic acid (molar ratio 1.6:1) increased iron absorption significantly. Increasing the molar ratio of Na2EDTA to fortification iron from 0.3:1 to 1:1 had no effect on iron absorption.
Key Words: Iron iron absorption stable isotope food fortification iron fortification children ascorbic acid vitamin C Na2EDTA Peru childhood anemia iron deficiency pediatric nutrition
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The overall success of iron-fortification programs depends on several factors. One of the most important factors is the bioavailability of iron from the fortified foods. The iron-fortified school breakfast meals in Peru provide 14 mg Fe, as ferrous sulfate, a soluble iron compound with high relative bioavailability (1). However, the bioavailability of dietary iron, including iron-fortification compounds, depends on the overall composition of the meal, ie, the presence of enhancers and inhibitors of iron absorption. The school breakfast meals used in the Peruvian program are cereal-based with limited amounts of added ascorbic acid. Therefore, iron absorption would be relatively low, in part because of the presence of phytic acid, a potent inhibitor of iron absorption that is found in cereals (3).
The aim of the present study was to measure iron absorption from a meal used in the Peruvian school breakfast program and to evaluate the possibility of improving iron absorption by adding known enhancers of iron absorption. Two approaches for optimizing iron absorption from the meal were evaluated: increasing the ascorbic acid content (4) and adding Na2EDTA (5).
| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Subjects
Forty-seven apparently healthy boys and girls aged 67 y were recruited at a primary school participating in the school breakfast program in Lima, Peru. Children, parents, and teachers were fully informed about the aims and procedures of the study and written consent was obtained from at least one parent of each child. The protocol was reviewed and approved by the Ethical Committee at the Instituto de Investigacion Nutricional, Lima, Peru.
Test meals
A drink powder made from cereal, milk, and soy was prepared especially for the study from raw materials normally used for the preparation of school breakfast meals. The drink powder consisted of 16% extruded rice flour, 8% extruded wheat flour, 16% milk powder, and 16% extruded soy flour without added iron or ascorbic acid. Standardized test meals were prepared immediately before consumption by mixing 50 g drink powder with 200 g hot deionized water. White wheat bread (42 g) prepared from unfortified wheat flour was served together with the drink. All test meals were identical, except for the ascorbic acid and Na2EDTA contents. Water solutions of ascorbic acid [L(+)ascorbic acid (176.1 g/mol); Merck, Darmstadt, Germany] or Na2EDTA [Na2EDTA x 2H2O (372.2 g/mol), Merck] were added to the test meal drinks immediately before consumption. Each test meal contained 14 mg added Fe as iron stable-isotope labels and iron with natural isotopic composition (food grade FeSO4 x 7H2O; Merck).
There were 5 studies that differed in terms of the composition of the breakfast drinks (test meals). Within each study, children were randomly assigned to receive either test meal A or test meal B on day 1. The other test meal (A or B) was consumed on the following day. Each child was his or her own control. The molar ratios of ascorbic acid to iron and of Na2EDTA to iron in test meals A and B, respectively, in the 5 studies were calculated on the basis of the fortification iron content in the meal, ie, 14 mg Fe/test meal.
The labeled test meals were administered under standardized conditions after the children had fasted overnight. All the children were supervised closely by the investigators during consumption of the test meals and for an additional 3 h, during which time no food or drink was allowed.
Stable-isotope labels
The stable-isotope solutions of 57FeSO4 and 58FeSO4 were gravimetrically prepared from isotopically enriched elemental iron (Chemgas, Paris) by dissolution in 0.1 mol H2SO4/L. The solutions were diluted by mass to an appropriate concentration for individual dose preparation. Solutions of 57FeSO4 and 58FeSO4 were stored in polytetrafluoroethylene containers that were flushed with argon to keep the iron in the +II oxidation state. The isotopic composition of the iron in solution was determined by NTIMS with a magnetic sector field instrument (Finnigan MAT 262 thermal ionization mass spectrometer; Finnigan MAT, Bremen, Germany). Iron concentrations were determined by isotope dilution mass spectrometry against a diluted, commercially available iron standard (Titrisol, Merck). Stable-isotope doses were based on the precision attainable by positive thermal ionization mass spectrometry (6) and were therefore relatively high in Studies 1 and 2 (2.6 mg 58Fe and 7.0 mg 57Fe). Analyses of enriched blood samples obtained from children in Study 1 were used to evaluate certain aspects of our methods (8). The isotope doses used in Studies 35 were smaller (2.0 mg 58Fe and 4.0 mg 57Fe per subject) because of the improved precision of iron isotopic analysis by NTIMS (7).
Blood samples
Venous blood samples (5 mL) were drawn into EDTA-treated tubes before the children consumed the first labeled test meal (baseline) and again 14 d after intake of the second labeled test meal. Baseline blood samples were analyzed for hemoglobin by the cyanomethemoglobin technique and for plasma ferritin by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Blood samples drawn 14 d after intake of the second test meal were analyzed for the incorporation of stable-isotope labels (57Fe and 58Fe) into red blood cells. Body weight and height were measured at the time of blood sampling.
Analysis of isotopic composition of blood samples
During all of the experimental work, the guidelines for trace element analysis were followed strictly, including additional purification of the commercial chemicals and reagents and acid washing of all containers used during trace element analysis. All samples were handled under clean laboratory conditions to reduce the risk of sample contamination during analysis.
Each isotopically enriched blood sample was analyzed in duplicate to determine its iron isotopic composition under chemical blank monitoring. Whole blood samples were mineralized by using a mixture of nitric acid and hydrogen peroxide and microwave digestion. Sample iron was separated from the matrix by anion-exchange chromatography after a solvent-solvent extraction step into diethylether (6, 9). All isotopic analyses were performed by NTIMS with a magnetic sector field mass spectrometer (MAT 262 thermal ionization mass spectrometer; Finnigan MAT) equipped with a multicollector system for simultaneous ion beam detection (7). Iron separated from blood samples was loaded on barium fluoridecoated rhenium filaments of a double-filament ion source together with silver fluoride to promote the formation of FeF4 -ions. Because of the high enrichment of the stable-isotope labels and the small amounts of stable-isotope labels incorporated into red blood cells, it was possible to normalize the acquired isotopic data internally for the natural ratio of 54Fe to 56Fe (10).
Calculation of iron absorption
The amount of circulating iron was calculated on the basis of blood volume and hemoglobin concentration. Blood volume was calculated by using empirically derived formulas that used height and weight (11). On the basis of the shift of iron isotope ratios in the blood samples and the calculated amount of iron circulating in the body, we calculated the amounts of 57Fe and 58Fe in the blood 14 d after test meal administration. The calculations followed the principles of isotope dilution and took into consideration that the isotopically enriched 57Fe and 58Fe used as labels contained small amounts of other iron stable isotopes (8). We assumed 90% incorporation of the absorbed iron into red blood cells.
Food sample analysis
Food samples were mineralized by microwave digestion in a mixture of nitric acid and hydrogen peroxide (MLS 1200; MLS, Leutkirch, Germany) and the iron content was measured by electrothermal flame atomic absorption spectroscopy (SpectrAA 400; Varian, Mulgrave, Australia); standard addition technique was used to minimize matrix effects. The phytic acid content was determined by HPLC (12, 13).
Statistical analyses
Sample-size calculations were performed by using our previous data on the effect of ascorbic acid on iron absorption in infants (14). It was estimated that 8 children in each of the 5 studies would be a sufficient sample size to detect a nutritionally significant relative difference (50%) in iron absorption between the 2 test meals with 80% power and a type I error of 5%. Paired t tests were used to evaluate data from Studies 15. The values were logarithmically transformed before statistical analysis. The results are presented as geometric means +1SD and -1SD. Analysis of variance with Tukey's multiple comparison test was used to evaluate differences between studies on the basis of logarithmically transformed absorption ratios (Studies 35).
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
800000 to 1 million Peruvian children (ER Jacoby and G Lopez de Romaña, unpublished observations, 1998). The effects of the program have been measured as significantly increased intakes of energy and nutrients by participating children (G Lopez de Romaña, unpublished observations, 1997). In addition, the intervention has led to improvements in school attendance and school performance, as measured by a vocabulary test, in children living in a rural area of the Andes (15, 16). The school breakfast meals evaluated in this study contained a relatively high amount of added iron, 14 mg/meal. Anemia is a major public health problem in Peruvian children and is thought to be largely the result of iron deficiency. The effect of the fortified foods has been evaluated by comparing the prevalence of anemia before and after implementation of the program in selected areas. For example, in a central Andean town, the prevalence of anemia dropped from 66% to 14% in the 6 mo after the program was introduced (G Lopez de Romaña, unpublished observations, 1997). Although the decrease in anemia prevalence was impressive in this relatively small study, 14% of the children were still anemic after the dietary intervention. Low bioavailability of iron from the cereal-based meals could limit the effect of the program on iron deficiency anemia; therefore, a study of iron absorption from a typical meal used in the program was initiated. In addition, we evaluated the possibility of increasing iron absorption by adding additional ascorbic acid or Na2EDTA to the school breakfast meals.
In the present study, we chose to use ascorbic acid to improve iron absorption because it is one of the major enhancers of iron absorption in adults (4, 1719) and in infants and children (14, 20, 21). Ascorbic acid is widely used in food products as an enhancer of iron absorption and as an antioxidant. However, because of its susceptibility to oxidation by exposure to air, especially when the food is also exposed to heat, humidity, or both, the usefulness of ascorbic acid as an enhancer of iron absorption is uncertain in some situations. Thus, a more stable enhancer of iron absorption is sometimes needed. This is especially important in developing countries, where the storage and packaging of food can pose serious problems (22). Na2EDTA is a stable compound and a permitted food additive (23) that could be added to foods together with fortification iron in food fortification programs. Previous studies in adults showed significantly increased iron absorption after addition of Na2EDTA together with ferrous sulfate to cereal-based meals (5, 24).
The geometric mean iron absorption was
5% from the test meals that were fortified with 14 mg Fe and contained ascorbic acid at a relatively low molar ratio relative to fortification iron (0.6:1; Studies 1 and 2). When we increased the ascorbic acid content to 70 mg (resulting in a molar ratio of 1.6:1), mean iron absorption increased significantly to 8.2% (Study 1). Our results are thus in agreement with earlier data from Derman et al (4) that showed a significant enhancing effect of ascorbic acid on iron absorption from an infant cereal at molar ratios in the range of 1.1 to 2.4 relative to added iron. Replacing ascorbic acid (molar ratio of 0.6:1) with Na2EDTA at a molar ratio of 0.7:1 relative to fortification iron resulted in similar fractional iron absorption from the meals (4.9% compared with 4.1%, respectively; Study 2). The amount of Na2EDTA added in Study 2 was determined on the basis of the acceptable daily intake for EDTA (2.5 mg/kg body wt) (23) and an estimated body weight of 20 kg in the study population.
Our observation that iron absorption was significantly enhanced after addition of Na2EDTA at all molar ratios included in this study is supported by the results of other investigators. MacPhail et al (5) showed a positive effect of Na2EDTA on iron absorption from a rice-based meal fortified with ferrous sulfate when it was added in molar ratios ranging from 0.25 to 1.0 relative to iron. Recent data (RF Hurrell, M Reddy, and JD Cook, unpublished observations, 1999) also showed an enhancing effect of Na2EDTA on absorption of iron from ferrous sulfate when Na2EDTA was added at molar ratios
0.7:1 in meals with low phytic acid contents and
1:1 in meals with high phytic acid contents.
The amount of iron absorbed from the school breakfast meals currently provided by the program is 0.7 mg/d because of the relatively high degree of iron fortification along with 27 mg added ascorbic acid (molar ratio of 0.6:1). An increase in the ascorbic acid content to 70 mg/serving (molar ratio of 1.6:1) would increase the mean amount of iron absorbed to 1.15 mg/d. These quantities (0.7 and 1.15 mg/d) represent 70% and 115%, respectively, of the daily requirement for absorbed iron for young children (25). Thus, the expected effect on iron nutrition would be substantial if an adequate ascorbic acid content in the meals could be assured.
Addition of Na2EDTA to school breakfast meals at a molar ratio relative to fortification iron of 0.7:1 would result in iron absorption similar to that from meals containing the lower ascorbic acid content (0.6:1) used in this study. Thus, Na2EDTA could be a useful alternative to ascorbic acid as an enhancer of iron absorption in situations in which ascorbic acid stability is of concern. In addition, the presence of Na2EDTA in cereal-based diets could have a positive effect on zinc nutriture because NaFeEDTA was shown to improve zinc absorption in women (26).
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
B. Troesch, I. Egli, C. Zeder, R. F Hurrell, S. de Pee, and M. B Zimmermann Optimization of a phytase-containing micronutrient powder with low amounts of highly bioavailable iron for in-home fortification of complementary foods Am. J. Clinical Nutrition, February 1, 2009; 89(2): 539 - 544. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
P. Thankachan, T. Walczyk, S. Muthayya, A. V Kurpad, and R. F Hurrell Iron absorption in young Indian women: the interaction of iron status with the influence of tea and ascorbic acid Am. J. Clinical Nutrition, April 1, 2008; 87(4): 881 - 886. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. S. g. Bonsmann, T. Walczyk, S. Renggli, and R. F Hurrell Nonheme Iron Absorption in Young Women Is Not Influenced by Purified Sulfated and Unsulfated Glycosaminoglycans J. Nutr., May 1, 2007; 137(5): 1161 - 1164. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L. Davidsson, E. Ziegler, C. Zeder, T. Walczyk, and R. Hurrell Sodium iron EDTA [NaFe(III)EDTA] as a food fortificant: erythrocyte incorporation of iron and apparent absorption of zinc, copper, calcium, and magnesium from a complementary food based on wheat and soy in healthy infants Am. J. Clinical Nutrition, January 1, 2005; 81(1): 104 - 109. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. B. Perez-Exposito, S. Villalpando, J. A. Rivera, I. J. Griffin, and S. A. Abrams Ferrous Sulfate Is More Bioavailable among Preschoolers than Other Forms of Iron in a Milk-Based Weaning Food Distributed by PROGRESA, a National Program in Mexico J. Nutr., January 1, 2005; 135(1): 64 - 69. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Hettiarachchi, D. C. Hilmers, C. Liyanage, and S. A. Abrams Na2EDTA Enhances the Absorption of Iron and Zinc from Fortified Rice Flour in Sri Lankan Children J. Nutr., November 1, 2004; 134(11): 3031 - 3036. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. C. Fidler and L. Davidsson The Effect of Na2EDTA on Iron Absorption from Ferrous Fumarate J. Nutr., May 1, 2004; 134(5): 1201 - 1201. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. C Fidler, L. Davidsson, C. Zeder, and R. F Hurrell Erythorbic acid is a potent enhancer of nonheme-iron absorption Am. J. Clinical Nutrition, January 1, 2004; 79(1): 99 - 102. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Shah, I. J. Griffin, C. H. Lifschitz, and S. A. Abrams Effect of Orange and Apple Juices on Iron Absorption in Children Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, December 1, 2003; 157(12): 1232 - 1236. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. C Fidler, L. Davidsson, T. Walczyk, and R. F Hurrell Iron absorption from fish sauce and soy sauce fortified with sodium iron EDTA Am. J. Clinical Nutrition, August 1, 2003; 78(2): 274 - 278. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
R. F. Hurrell Fortification: Overcoming Technical and Practical Barriers J. Nutr., April 1, 2002; 132(4): 806S - 812. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L. Davidsson, T. Dimitriou, E. Boy, T. Walczyk, and R. F Hurrell Iron bioavailability from iron-fortified Guatemalan meals based on corn tortillas and black bean paste Am. J. Clinical Nutrition, March 1, 2002; 75(3): 535 - 539. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |