Scimex: Higher iron levels are associated with an increased risk of
gestational diabetes in pregnant women, raising questions about iron
supplementation recommendations. New research published in Diabetologia
(the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes
[EASD]) shows that high levels of iron biomarkers in the body are
associated with an increased risk of gestational diabetes (GDM) in
pregnant women, raising questions about routine recommendations on iron
supplementation in pregnancy. The study is by Dr Cuilin Zhang and Dr
Shristi Rawal, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), US National Institutes of
Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD, USA and colleagues.
Iron is regarded
as a double-edged sword in living systems, as both iron deficiency and
excess can be harmful. Pregnant women are particularly vulnerable to
iron deficiency and related adverse pregnancy outcomes. While a few
guidelines, including those from the
American Congress of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists, recommend screening and treatment only
as necessary for iron deficiency, several other groups such as the World
Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention recommend routine iron supplementation among pregnant women.
Emerging evidence has pointed to a possible link between higher iron
stores and abnormal blood sugar control (including type 2 diabetes) in
non-pregnant individuals.
In this new research, the authors did a
case–control study of 107 GDM cases and 214 controls (matched on age,
race/ethnicity, and gestational week of blood collection) within the
prospective, multiracial NICHD Fetal Growth Studies-Singleton Cohort
(2009-2013). The authors looked at several biomarkers of iron status,
including plasma hepcidin, ferritin, and soluble transferrin receptor
(sTfR), and these data were used to calculate the sTfR:ferritin ratio,
which captures both cellular iron need and availability of body iron
stores. These markers were longitudinally measured or calculated four
times during pregnancy, twice before GDM diagnosis (gestational weeks
10–14 and 15–26), and twice afterwards (gestational weeks 23–31 and
33–39). GDM diagnosis was ascertained from medical records based on oral
glucose tolerance test results. Statistical modelling was then used to
calculate the odds ratio of GDM with iron status, accounting for factors
such as demographics, pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), and other
major risk factors.
The authors found that for both hepcidin and
ferritin, in the second trimester of pregnancy, those in the top 25% of
levels of these markers had around a 2.5 times increased subsequent risk
of developing GDM compared with those in the bottom 25%. Similar
findings were observed for ferritin levels in the first trimester.
Describing
the findings as biologically plausible, the authors offer various
potential explanations. Iron may play a role in the development of GDM
through several potential mechanisms. As a strong pro-oxidant, free iron
can promote several cellular reactions that generate reactive oxygen
species and increase the level of oxidative stress. Oxidative stress
induced from excess iron accumulation can cause damage to and death of
pancreatic beta cells which produce insulin, and consequently,
contribute to impaired insulin synthesis and secretion. In the liver,
high iron stores may induce insulin resistance via impaired insulin
signalling as well as by limiting the capacity of the liver to extract
insulin.
The authors conclude: “In summary, findings from this
longitudinal and prospective study among multiracial, relatively healthy
pregnant women without major pre-pregnancy chronic diseases, suggest
that higher maternal iron stores may play a role in the development of
GDM starting as early as the first trimester. These findings are of
clinical and public health importance as they extend the observation of
an association between high body iron stores and elevated risk of
glucose intolerance among non-pregnant individuals to pregnancy, and
raise potential concerns about the recommendation of routine iron
supplementation among pregnant women who already have sufficient iron.”