AI Article Synopsis

  • Anemia is linked to higher all-cause mortality in older adults, with participants having anemia showing significantly increased risks for death due to cardiovascular disease, cancer, and respiratory disease.
  • Over a median follow-up of 7.5 years, 21% of participants were found to have anemia, leading to 1,147 deaths in total.
  • However, low ferritin levels in non-anemic individuals didn't show a strong connection to mortality, except for cancer mortality in men with low inflammation.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Anemia is a risk factor for all-cause mortality in older adults. Iron deficiency may also be associated with adverse outcomes, independent of its role in causing anemia. This study tested the hypotheses that anemia, and low ferritin among non-anemic participants, were associated with all-cause and cause-specific mortality in a community-based cohort of older adults.

Methods: Fasting blood was obtained from 5,070 ARIC participants (median age: 75 years) in 2011-2013. Anemia was defined by hemoglobin concentrations <12 g/dL in women and <13 g/dL in men. We classified 4,020 non-anemic participants by quartiles of plasma ferritin, measured by the SomaScan proteomics platform. Cox proportional hazards regression was used. Mortality was ascertained via phone calls with proxies as part of twice-yearly cohort follow-up, surveillance of local hospital discharge indexes, state death records, and linkage to the National Death Index.

Results: Of the total participants, 21% had anemia at baseline. Over a median of 7.5 years, there were 1,147 deaths, including 357 due to cardiovascular disease (CVD), 302 to cancer, and 132 to respiratory disease. Compared to those with normal hemoglobin, participants with anemia had a higher risk of all-cause mortality (hazard ratio 1.81 [95% CI: 1.60-2.06]), and mortality due to CVD (1.77 [1.41-2.22]), cancer (1.81 [1.41-2.33]), and respiratory disease (1.72 [1.18-2.52]) in demographics-adjusted models. In fully adjusted models, associations with all-cause mortality (1.37 [1.19-1.58]) and cause-specific mortality were attenuated. In non-anemic participants, lower ferritin levels were not associated with all-cause or cause-specific mortality, though associations were observed among participants with lesser evidence of inflammation (CRP below the median level of 1.9 mg/L) and for cancer mortality in men only.

Conclusion: Anemia is common among older adults and is associated with all-cause mortality, as well as mortality due to CVD, cancer, and respiratory disease. Our results do not provide evidence that iron deficiency, independent of anemia, is associated with mortality in this population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11493523PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000539973DOI Listing

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