• Age and ageing · Nov 2012

    Long-term mortality risks associated with mild anaemia in older persons: the Busselton Health Study.

    • Kerry A Chalmers, Matthew W Knuiman, Mark L Divitini, David G Bruce, John K Olynyk, and Elizabeth A Milward.
    • School of Psychology, The University of Newcastle and Hunter Medical Research Institute, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia.
    • Age Ageing. 2012 Nov 1; 41 (6): 759-64.

    Backgroundup to 25% of older people in the USA and other Western countries are anaemic by World Health Organization (WHO) criteria. The objective of this study was to examine the long-term relationships of haemoglobin concentration with all-cause and cause-specific mortality in a community-based sample of Australian adults surveyed in 1978.Methodsa community survey of 2,194 adults aged 40+ years in Busselton, Western Australia in 1978 with mortality follow-up to 2001. Cox regression models were used to investigate the relationships of haemoglobin as a continuous measure and anaemia by WHO criteria (women <12 g/dl (7.5 mmol/l); men <13 g/dl (8.1 mmol/l)) with all-cause, cardiovascular and cancer mortality.Resultsanaemia was predominantly mild (>10 g/dl) and normocytic. There was an increased risk of death from all causes and from cancer for men with low haemoglobin. Cancers were predominantly of the prostate and genito-urinary organs, and to a lesser extent the gastrointestinal tract. There was no increased risk of all cause or cancer death in women.Conclusionmild, normocytic anaemia is associated with survival reductions in middle-aged and older men, where it often occurs with prostate, gastrointestinal and other cancers, and should be investigated to exclude treatable causes.

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