Vitamin A, Vitamin D, And Iron: New Evidence On Childhood Anemia Risk
| Component | Details |
|---|---|
| Cross‐sectional data | 1,725 children (6–17 years) in Hunan Province |
| Indicators | Demographics, diet, outdoor activity, serum micronutrients (Vitamin A, 25‐hydroxy Vitamin D, ferritin, zinc) |
| Analysis | Multivariable logistic regression |
| Genetic analysis | Mendelian Randomization (MR) using GWAS datasets |
| Outcomes | Causal links between micronutrients and anemia risk |
Lifestyle Factors
| Factor | Effect on Anemia Risk |
|---|---|
| ≥30 min outdoor activity | ↓ 47–63% |
| Daily/occasional milk intake | ↓ 38–53% |
| Rural residence | ↑ risk |
| Picky eating | ↑ risk |
| Ferritin deficiency | ↑ risk |
Micronutrient Associations
| Micronutrient | Observational Findings | MR Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Vitamin A | Higher levels (≥0.44 μg/mL) → lower anemia risk | No clear causal effect |
| Ferritin | J‐shaped curve:Strong protective causal effect | |
| Serum Iron | Deficiency increases risk | Strong protective causal effect |
| Vitamin D | No significant association | Weak protective effect after removing outliers |
| Zinc | No significant association | No causal effect |
Implications
Vitamin A may reduce anemia risk by supporting red blood cell production, iron metabolism, and immune function.
Vitamin D may play a role in erythropoiesis and iron homeostasis, with MR analysis providing new evidence of its protective potential.
Ferritin and serum iron are confirmed as key biomarkers and intervention targets for childhood anemia.
Lifestyle factors such as outdoor activity and milk consumption indirectly lower anemia risk by improving overall health and immunity.
Conclusion
This study highlights that iron supplementation alone is insufficient. A holistic approach involving Vitamin A, Vitamin D, iron status, and healthy lifestyle factors is essential to reduce childhood anemia. Public health strategies should integrate nutritional diversity, outdoor activity, and targeted supplementation to achieve better outcomes.
Reference: Tang, J.; Tan, Y.; Chen, Y.; Wang, F.; Wang, T.; Sun, M.; Luo, M.; Chen, Y.; Wen, Y.; Li, Z.; et al. Vitamin A, Vitamin D, Iron, and Zinc in Relation to Anemia Risk: Observational Evidence and Mendelian Randomization. Nutrients 2025, 17, 3220.
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