4.6 Article

Serum ferritin concentrations and body iron stores in a multicenter, multiethnic primary-care population

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY
Volume 83, Issue 8, Pages 618-626

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajh.21179

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P30 CA062203] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NCRR NIH HHS [M01-RR000827, M01-RR10284, M01-RR00032, M01 RR010284, M01 RR000827, M01 RR000032] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NHLBI NIH HHS [N01-HC-05189, N01-HC-05188, N01HC05189, N01HC05188, N01-HC-05191, R01-HL083328, N01HC05190, N01-HC-05186, N01 HC005192, N01-HC-05190, N01HC05185, N01HC05186, UH1 HL003679, R01 HL083328, UH1-HL03679-05, N01HC05191, N01-HC-05185] Funding Source: Medline

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How often elevated serum ferritin in primary-care patients reflects increased iron stores (normally 0.8 g in men, 0.4 g in women) is not known. The Hereditary Hemochromatosis and Iron Overload Screening (HEIRS) study screened 101,168 primary-care participants (44% Caucasians, 27% African-Americans, 14% Asians/Pacific Islanders, 13% Hispanics, 2% others). Follow-up clinical evaluation was performed in 302 of 333 HFE C282Y homozygotes regardless of iron measures and 1,375 of 1,920 nonhomozygotes with serum ferritin >300 mu g/L (men), >200 mu g/L (women) and transferrin saturation >50% (men), >45% (women). Quantitative phlebotomy was conducted in 122 of 175 C282Y homozygotes and 122 of 1,102 nonhomozygotes with non-transfusional serum ferritin elevation at evaluation. The estimated prevalence in the Caucasian population of C282Y homozygotes with serum ferritin >900 mu g/L at evaluation was 20 per 10,000 men and 4 per 10,000 women; this constellation was predictive of iron stores >4 g in men and >2 g in women. The estimated prevalence per 10,000 of non-C282Y homozygotes with serum ferritin >900 mu g/L at evaluation was 7 among Caucasians, 13 among Hispanics, 20 among African Americans, and 38 among Asians and Pacific Islanders, and this constellation was predictive of iron stores >2 g but 4 g. In conclusion, serum ferritin >900 mu g/L after initial elevations of both serum ferritin and transferrin saturation is predictive of mildly increased iron stores in multiple ethnic populations regardless of HFE genotype. Serum ferritin >900 mu g/L in male C282Y homozygotes is predictive of moderately increased iron stores.

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