| Literature DB >> 29744352 |
Axel Dignass1,2, Karima Farrag2,3, Jürgen Stein2,3.
Abstract
Patients with inflammatory conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), chronic heart failure (CHF), and chronic kidney disease (CKD) have high rates of iron deficiency with adverse clinical consequences. Under normal circumstances, serum ferritin levels are a sensitive marker for iron status but ferritin is an acute-phase reactant that becomes elevated in response to inflammation, complicating the diagnosis. Proinflammatory cytokines also trigger an increase in hepcidin, which restricts uptake of dietary iron and promotes sequestration of iron by ferritin within storage sites. Patients with inflammatory conditions may thus have restricted availability of iron for erythropoiesis and other cell functions due to increased hepcidin expression, despite normal or high levels of serum ferritin. The standard threshold for iron deficiency (<30 μg/L) therefore does not apply and transferrin saturation (TSAT), a marker of iron availability, should also be assessed. A serum ferritin threshold of <100 μg/L or TSAT < 20% can be considered diagnostic for iron deficiency in CHF, CKD, and IBD. If serum ferritin is 100-300 μg/L, TSAT < 20% is required to confirm iron deficiency. Routine surveillance of serum ferritin and TSAT in these at-risk groups is advisable so that iron deficiency can be detected and managed.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29744352 PMCID: PMC5878890 DOI: 10.1155/2018/9394060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chronic Dis ISSN: 2314-5749
Causes, prevalence, and clinical consequences of iron deficiency in inflammatory conditions.
| Disease | Key causes of iron deficiency [ | Estimated prevalence | Potential clinical consequences [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chronic heart failure | Inflammatory state | ~50% (range: 37–63%) | Fatigue and reduced exercise capacity, work capacity, and quality of life |
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| Chronic kidney disease | Inflammatory state | 24–85% (highest incidence with more severe CKD) [ | Iron-deficiency anemia associated with fatigue, increased mortality, and progression to end-stage renal disease |
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| Inflammatory bowel disease | Inflammatory state | ~45% (range: 43–55%) | Fatigue, exhaustion, reduced exercise capacity and quality of life |
CKD, chronic kidney disease; ESA, erythropoietin-stimulating agent; GI, gastrointestinal. aIron deficiency defined as serum ferritin < 100 μg/L or 100–300 μg/L [11–13] (or <800 μg/L [14]) with transferrin saturation (TSAT) < 20%. bIron deficiency defined as serum ferritin < 100 μg/L or TSAT < 20%. cIron deficiency defined as serum ferritin < 30 μg/L or TSAT < 16% [18, 19] or <20% [20] or as serum ferritin < 100 μg/L if C-reactive protein (CRP) > 5 mg/L [20] or >10 mg/L [18].
Figure 1Normal iron homeostasis in the reticuloendothelial macrophage. Macrophages phagocytose aged or damaged red blood cells, using heme oxygenase 1 to release iron from heme, a recycling process that accounts for approximately 90% of the body's daily iron needs. Iron is rapidly released to circulating transferrin or, when present in excess, stored in ferritin. When required, ferritin is degraded in the lysosomes via a process called ferritinophagy and the iron is released. Iron(II) is exported from the macrophage via ferroportin in the cell membrane in a process coupled to reoxidation from iron(II) to iron(III) by membrane-bound ceruloplasmin. Iron(III) is then loaded onto transferrin for transport in the plasma.
Figure 2The role of hepcidin in systemic iron homeostasis. (a) In healthy individuals, hepcidin production increases in response to increasing levels of transferrin-bound serum iron and iron stores. Hepcidin internalizes and degrades the iron transporter ferroportin, restricting the export of iron from enterocytes and from iron stores in hepatocytes and macrophages, to restore normal iron levels. (b) In inflammatory conditions, hepcidin production increases in response to inflammatory cytokines such as IL-6, disrupting the usual homeostatic mechanisms. Ferroportin is internalized and degraded, reducing transmembrane export of iron, and the availability of iron to bind to transferrin is restricted.
Proposed serum ferritin and TSAT thresholds for the diagnosis of iron deficiency in patients with or without inflammatory conditions.
| Population | Thresholds |
|---|---|
| No inflammatory condition [ | Serum ferritin < 30 |
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| Inflammatory conditions [ | Serum ferritin < 100 |
TSAT, transferrin saturation.
Laboratory tests for iron deficiency [4, 32, 50, 64].
| Absolute iron deficiency | Functional iron deficiency in inflammation | Both absolute iron deficiency and functional iron deficiency | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serum ferritin | ↓ | ↑ | Depends on the degree of iron deficiency |
| TSAT | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ |
| Hepcidin | ↓ | ↑ | Depends on degree of iron deficiency |
| CHr | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ |
| % HYPO | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ |
| sTfR | ↑ | ↓ | ↓ or normal |
| sTfR/log ferritin | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ |
| CRP | Normal | ↑ | ↑ |
CHr, content of reticulocyte hemoglobin; CRP, C-reactive protein; % HYPO, percentage of hypochromic erythrocytes; sTfR, soluble transferrin receptor; TSAT, transferrin saturation.