Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 47: 1465-1467, 2001;
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(Clinical Chemistry. 2001;47:1465-1467.)
© 2001 American Association for Clinical Chemistry, Inc.


Technical Briefs

Determination of Iron Metabolism-related Reference Values in a Healthy Adult Population

Glenn Van den Bosch1, Jan Van den Bossche2, Carola Wagner3, Pieter De Schouwer2, Martine Van De Vyvere2 and Hugo Neels1a

Laboratories of
1 Clinical Biochemistry and
2 Hematology, Algemeen Centrum Ziekenhuis Antwerpen, Campus Stuivenberg, Lange Beeldekensstraat 267, B-2060 Antwerp, Belgium
3 Dade-Behring Marburg GMBH, PO Box 11 49, 35001 Marburg, Germany

aauthor for correspondence: fax 323-2177358, e-mail hugo.neels@ocmw.antwerpen.be

Although iron evaluation on bone marrow aspirates remains the gold standard for assessing iron status, several other methods have been implemented that are less invasive and more practical. Serum iron, percentage of saturation, and total iron-binding capacity, however, lack sensitivity and are too labile to be of value as single determiners (1). Indirect measures of the functional iron compartment, such as mean cell volume and red cell distribution width, have the disadvantage of becoming indicators relatively late in the development of iron deficiency (2). Serum ferritin can be used as a marker of the iron storage compartment because it is the earliest marker to decrease with iron depletion. However, because ferritin is an acute-phase reactant in serum, its concentration may rise disproportionately to the iron storage status during inflammation, infection, or neoplasia (3), an occurrence that limits utility of ferritin in the differential diagnosis between anemia from iron deficiency and anemia from chronic disease (4). Because the soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) concentration is not influenced by acute-phase reactions, it remains within reference values in patients with anemia of chronic disease. sTfR, therefore, can be used as a more reliable index of iron deficiency anemia (5)(6). The correlation between sTfR and bone marrow erythropoetic activity allows the use of sTfR for monitoring erythropoetin therapy, with sTfR increasing 4 weeks before the first increase of hemoglobin (7). However, conditions associated with erythroid hyperplasia can also lead to an increase of sTfR in the absence of iron deficiency (8). The sTfR/log ferritin ratio (sTfR/ferritin ratio) is reported to be even more sensitive in the presence of borderline normal ferritin and/or sTfR concentrations. This index may also be useful in distinguishing iron deficiency from conditions with hyperplastic erythropoiesis . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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References




The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:


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Annals of Clinical & Laboratory ScienceHome page
H. Knox-Macaulay, D. Gravell, and F. Elender
Serum Transferrin Receptor Status of Healthy Adult Arabs
Ann. Clin. Lab. Sci., January 1, 2007; 37(1): 57 - 62.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


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Clin. Chem.Home page
T. I. Takala, P. Suominen, R. Isoaho, S.-L. Kivela, M. Lopponen, O. Peltola, A. Rajamaki, and K. Irjala
Iron-Replete Reference Intervals to Increase Sensitivity of Hematologic and Iron Status Laboratory Tests in the Elderly
Clin. Chem., September 1, 2002; 48(9): 1586 - 1589.
[Full Text] [PDF]




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