Episode

Acute Heart Failure in Pregnancy and Postpartum: Role of Iron Deficiency and Anemia in an Indian Multicenter Case-Control Study

Dec 29, 20257:19
Epidemiology
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Abstract

Background: Cardiovascular diseases in pregnant and postpartum women remain under-researched, despite being the leading cause of indirect maternal deaths. In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), anemia and iron deficiency are highly prevalent and may compound the cardiovascular stress of pregnancy, yet their contribution to maternal acute heart failure (AHF) is poorly understood. This study investigated the association between AHF in pregnancy/ postpartum and iron deficiency and anemia and assessed whether they remain consistent for peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM). Methods: We conducted a multicenter case-control study in ten hospitals across four Indian states (February 2019-November 2024). Cases were pregnant/postpartum women with echocardiography-confirmed AHF as per standard definition; controls were postpartum women within 48 hours of childbirth without history/symptoms of heart disease recruited on the day of each case presentation. Blood samples collected at recruitment were analyzed for hemoglobin, ferritin, transferrin saturation (TSAT), soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR), and hepcidin. Multivariable logistic regression models assessed associations between iron status, anemia, and AHF, adjusting for potential confounders. Subgroup analyses were performed for PPCM. Findings: Among 532 women with suspected heart failure, 317 had echocardiography-confirmed AHF and were compared with 1,091 controls. Moderate (Hb 7-9.9 g/dL) and severe (Hb <7 g/dL) anemia were respectively associated with 1.6-times (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.59; 95% CI 1.10-2.32) and 6.1-times (aOR 6.09; 95% CI 3.35-11.07) the odds of AHF in women without anemia. Iron deficiency based on increasing levels of sTfR (aOR 1.47, 95% CI 1.32-1.63), lowest two hepcidin quintiles (aOR 4.07, 95% CI 2.26-7.32; aOR 2.06 95% CI 1.14-3.73) and low TSAT (aOR 1.50, 95% CI 1.01-2.21) were independently associated with AHF. Associations persisted after adjusting for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and excluding women with pre-existing cardiac problems, and were consistent in the PPCM subgroup. Interpretation: Iron deficiency and moderate-to-severe anemia substantially increase the risk of AHF in pregnancy and postpartum, independent of hypertensive or pre-existing conditions. These findings identify iron deficiency as a major, preventable, and under-recognized contributor to maternal cardiac complications in LMICs, highlighting the need for targeted antenatal screening and correction.

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Cite This Paper

Year:2025
Category:epidemiology
APA

M., N., S., C. S., A., S., S., R., G., D., C., S., A., R., A., I. V., D., K. S., P., M., F., Z., I., R., R., D., C., O., M., A., S., K., P., L., S., L., B., C., J., A. (2025). Acute Heart Failure in Pregnancy and Postpartum: Role of Iron Deficiency and Anemia in an Indian Multicenter Case-Control Study. arXiv preprint arXiv:10.64898/2025.12.26.25343074.

MLA

Nair, M., Choudhury, S. S., Sundar, A., Rao, S., Deka, G., Solomi, C., Rani, A., Ismavel, V. A., Kakoty, S. D., Mahanta, P., Zahir, F., Roy, I., Deka, R., Opondo, C., Agarwal, M., Krasner, S., Leeson, P., Lakhal-Littleton, S., Casadei, B., and Armitage, J.. "Acute Heart Failure in Pregnancy and Postpartum: Role of Iron Deficiency and Anemia in an Indian Multicenter Case-Control Study." arXiv preprint arXiv:10.64898/2025.12.26.25343074 (2025).