Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial

Background: Food-based strategies to reduce nutritional iron deficiency have not been universally successful. Biofortification has the potential to become a sustainable, inexpensive, and effective solution. Objective: This randomized controlled trial was conducted to determine the efficacy of iro...

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Main Authors: Haas, Jere D., Luna, Sarah V., Lung'aho, Mercy G., Wenger, Michael J., Murray-Kolb, Laura E., Beebe, Stephen E., Gahutu, Jean-Bosco, Egli, Ines M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76243
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author Haas, Jere D.
Luna, Sarah V.
Lung'aho, Mercy G.
Wenger, Michael J.
Murray-Kolb, Laura E.
Beebe, Stephen E.
Gahutu, Jean-Bosco
Egli, Ines M.
author_browse Beebe, Stephen E.
Egli, Ines M.
Gahutu, Jean-Bosco
Haas, Jere D.
Luna, Sarah V.
Lung'aho, Mercy G.
Murray-Kolb, Laura E.
Wenger, Michael J.
author_facet Haas, Jere D.
Luna, Sarah V.
Lung'aho, Mercy G.
Wenger, Michael J.
Murray-Kolb, Laura E.
Beebe, Stephen E.
Gahutu, Jean-Bosco
Egli, Ines M.
author_sort Haas, Jere D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Background: Food-based strategies to reduce nutritional iron deficiency have not been universally successful. Biofortification has the potential to become a sustainable, inexpensive, and effective solution. Objective: This randomized controlled trial was conducted to determine the efficacy of iron-biofortified beans (Fe-Beans) to improve iron status in Rwandan women. Methods: A total of 195 women (aged 18–27 y) with serum ferritin <20 mg/L were randomly assigned to receive either Fe-Beans, with 86 mg Fe/kg, or standard unfortified beans (Control-Beans), with 50 mg Fe/kg, 2 times/d for 128 d in Huye, Rwanda. Iron status was assessed by hemoglobin, serum ferritin, soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR), and body iron (BI); inflammation was assessed by serum C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum a1-acid glycoprotein (AGP). Anthropometric measurements were performed at baseline and at end line. Random weekly serial sampling was used to collect blood during the middle 8wk of the feeding trial. Mixed-effects regression analysis with repeated measurements was used to evaluate the effect of Fe-Beans compared with Control-Beans on iron biomarkers throughout the course of the study. Results: At baseline, 86% of subjects were iron-deficient (serum ferritin <15 mg/L) and 37% were anemic (hemoglobin <120 g/L). Both groups consumed an average of 336 g wet beans/d. The Fe-Beans group consumed 14.5 6 1.6 mg Fe/d from biofortified beans, whereas the Control-Beans group consumed 8.6 6 0.8 mg Fe/d from standard beans (P < 0.05). Repeated-measures analyses showed significant time-by-treatment interactions for hemoglobin, log serum ferritin, and BI (P < 0.05). The Fe-Beans group had significantly greater increases in hemoglobin (3.8 g/L), log serum ferritin (0.1 log mg/L), and BI (0.5 mg/kg) than did controls after 128 d. For every 1 g Fe consumed from beans over the 128 study days, there was a significant 4.2-g/L increase in hemoglobin (P < 0.05). Conclusion: The consumption of iron-biofortified beans significantly improved iron status in Rwandan women. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01594359. J Nutr doi: 10.3945/jn.115.224741.
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spelling CGSpace762432025-03-13T09:44:28Z Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial Haas, Jere D. Luna, Sarah V. Lung'aho, Mercy G. Wenger, Michael J. Murray-Kolb, Laura E. Beebe, Stephen E. Gahutu, Jean-Bosco Egli, Ines M. iron beans food fortification women ferritin haemoglobin hierro frijol fortificación de alimentos mujeres ferritín hemoglobina gender Background: Food-based strategies to reduce nutritional iron deficiency have not been universally successful. Biofortification has the potential to become a sustainable, inexpensive, and effective solution. Objective: This randomized controlled trial was conducted to determine the efficacy of iron-biofortified beans (Fe-Beans) to improve iron status in Rwandan women. Methods: A total of 195 women (aged 18–27 y) with serum ferritin <20 mg/L were randomly assigned to receive either Fe-Beans, with 86 mg Fe/kg, or standard unfortified beans (Control-Beans), with 50 mg Fe/kg, 2 times/d for 128 d in Huye, Rwanda. Iron status was assessed by hemoglobin, serum ferritin, soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR), and body iron (BI); inflammation was assessed by serum C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum a1-acid glycoprotein (AGP). Anthropometric measurements were performed at baseline and at end line. Random weekly serial sampling was used to collect blood during the middle 8wk of the feeding trial. Mixed-effects regression analysis with repeated measurements was used to evaluate the effect of Fe-Beans compared with Control-Beans on iron biomarkers throughout the course of the study. Results: At baseline, 86% of subjects were iron-deficient (serum ferritin <15 mg/L) and 37% were anemic (hemoglobin <120 g/L). Both groups consumed an average of 336 g wet beans/d. The Fe-Beans group consumed 14.5 6 1.6 mg Fe/d from biofortified beans, whereas the Control-Beans group consumed 8.6 6 0.8 mg Fe/d from standard beans (P < 0.05). Repeated-measures analyses showed significant time-by-treatment interactions for hemoglobin, log serum ferritin, and BI (P < 0.05). The Fe-Beans group had significantly greater increases in hemoglobin (3.8 g/L), log serum ferritin (0.1 log mg/L), and BI (0.5 mg/kg) than did controls after 128 d. For every 1 g Fe consumed from beans over the 128 study days, there was a significant 4.2-g/L increase in hemoglobin (P < 0.05). Conclusion: The consumption of iron-biofortified beans significantly improved iron status in Rwandan women. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01594359. J Nutr doi: 10.3945/jn.115.224741. 2016-08 2016-07-20T17:09:05Z 2016-07-20T17:09:05Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76243 en Open Access Elsevier Haas, Jere D.; Luna, Sarah V.; Lung’aho, Mercy G.; Wenger, Michael J.; Murray-Kolb, Laura E.; Beebe, Stephen; Gahutu, Jean-Bosco; Egli, Ines M.. 2016. Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial. The Journal of Nutrition 146(8): 1586-1592.
spellingShingle iron
beans
food fortification
women
ferritin
haemoglobin
hierro
frijol
fortificación de alimentos
mujeres
ferritín
hemoglobina
gender
Haas, Jere D.
Luna, Sarah V.
Lung'aho, Mercy G.
Wenger, Michael J.
Murray-Kolb, Laura E.
Beebe, Stephen E.
Gahutu, Jean-Bosco
Egli, Ines M.
Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial
title Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial
title_full Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial
title_fullStr Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial
title_full_unstemmed Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial
title_short Consuming Iron Biofortified Beans Increases Iron Status in Rwandan Women after 128 Days in a Randomized Controlled Feeding Trial
title_sort consuming iron biofortified beans increases iron status in rwandan women after 128 days in a randomized controlled feeding trial
topic iron
beans
food fortification
women
ferritin
haemoglobin
hierro
frijol
fortificación de alimentos
mujeres
ferritín
hemoglobina
gender
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76243
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