Vitamin A status, inflammation adjustment, and immunologic response in the context of acute febrile illness: A pilot cohort study among pediatric patients.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
BACKGROUND: Vitamin A is necessary for an adequate immune response to infections. Infection also alters vitamin A biomarkers, which interferes with assessment of vitamin A deficiency and thus impairs clinical management. Here we apply multiple strategies to adjust vitamin A biomarkers for inflammation during acute infection and evaluate associations between adjusted vitamin A status and immunologic response markers. METHODS: We measured biomarkers in pediatric patients presenting with acute febrile illness in Guayaquil, Ecuador at paired acute and convalescent visits. Four adjustment strategies were applied to retinol-binding protein (RBP) concentrations: Thurnham correction factor (TCF), BRINDA regression correction (BRC), CRP-only adjustment factor (CRP), and proof-of-concept for a proposed interleukin 6 regression model (IL-6 RM). Adjusted RBP concentrations were compared between visits using the paired Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Multivariate regression analysis was used to assess associations between adjusted vitamin A status and immunologic response markers. RESULTS: A sample of 57 participants completed the acute visit 1, and 18 of these individuals completed the convalescent visit 2. The IL-6 RM was the only strategy resulting in adjusted RBP concentrations that were not significantly different between paired visits (p = 0.20). Following RBP adjustment, 0.0% of participants were classified as vitamin A deficient (RBP ≤ 0.70 μmol/L) and 14.0% were classified as vitamin A insufficient (RBP ≤ 1.05 μmol/L). Adjusted vitamin A insufficiency was associated with an increase in macrophage inflammatory protein 1-alpha (MIP-1α, p = 0.03) and a pro-inflammatory immune response profile (p = 0.03) during the acute visit. CONCLUSIONS: We introduce a strategy for adjusting vitamin A in the context of clinical illness based on IL-6 concentrations that will need to be validated in larger studies. Assessment of vitamin A during infection allows for further understanding of how vitamin A status modulates immunopathology and enables targeted strategies for vitamin A supplementation in the context of infection among children in settings with high burdens of undernutrition and infectious diseases.