Screening for iron deficiency: an analysis based on bone‐marrow examinations and serum ferritin determinations in a population sample of women

Leif Hallberg(Sahlgrenska University Hospital), Calle Bengtsson(Sahlgrenska University Hospital), Leif Lapidus(Sahlgrenska University Hospital), Göran Lindstedt(Sahlgrenska University Hospital), Per‐Arne Lundberg(Sahlgrenska University Hospital), L. Mattson Hultén(Sahlgrenska University Hospital)
British Journal of Haematology
December 1, 1993
Cited by 244

Abstract

Efficacy of different methods in screening for iron deficiency was re-examined in a randomly selected sample of 38-year-old women (n = 203) with known iron status based on absence/presence of stainable iron in bone-marrow smears. The study was made in 1968-69. Serum ferritin (SF) was determined in 1978 in frozen sera using the Ramco IRMA and, in 1992, samples were re-analysed using a RIA calibrated with the International Standard 80/602 for SF determination. The effect of storage on SF was calculated from a previously established relationship (courtesy of Dr Mark Worwood, Cardiff) between the results obtained with the Ramco assay and assays calibrated with IS 80/602. The distributions in iron replete and iron deficient women showed less overlap (diagnostic efficiency 91%) for SF than for other haematological parameters. The best discrimination was obtained at SF < 16 micrograms/l (specificity 98%; sensitivity 75%). Absence of iron stores was associated with signs of an iron deficient erythropoiesis, starting already at SF 25-40 micrograms/l. Use of multiple criteria to diagnose iron deficiency falsely reduces prevalence figures for iron deficiency.


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