How Do Ferritin Cutoffs Affect Diagnosis Rates?
TOPLINE:
Ferritin cutoffs of 30 and 45 ng/mL are linked to higher iron deficiency diagnosis rates than a cutoff of 15 ng/mL in patients with nonanemia and anemia.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers used data from the Family Medicine Research Using Electronic Medical Records (FIRE) project in Switzerland for patient analysis.
- A total of 255,351 patients aged 18 years or older with at least one consultation from 2021 to 2023 were included in the study.
- Ferritin cutoffs of 15, 30, and 45 ng/mL were used to define iron deficiency events for both patients with anemia and nonanemia, with patient-time calculated from inclusion to the earliest iron deficiency event or end of the study period.
- The analysis included sex, age, clinical patient profiles, and professional general practitioner characteristics.
TAKEAWAY:
- Ferritin cutoffs of 30 and 45 ng/mL were associated with higher incidences of iron deficiency diagnosis than a cutoff of 15 ng/mL.
- Nonanemic iron deficiency diagnoses had incidences of 4.1, 14.6, and 25.8 cases per 1000 patient-years at ferritin cutoffs of 15, 30, and 45 ng/mL, respectively.
- Anemic iron deficiency diagnosis had incidences of 3.5, 6.0, and 7.5 cases per 1000 patient-years at ferritin cutoffs of 15, 30, and 45 ng/mL, respectively.
IN PRACTICE:
"Ferritin cutoffs of 30 and 45 ng/mL were associated with a substantially higher incidence of iron deficiency compared with 15 ng/mL," wrote the authors of the story. "These results provide a basis for health system-level evaluation and benchmarking of ferritin testing in high-resource settings and call for a harmonization of diagnostic criteria for iron deficiency in primary care."
SOURCE:
The study was led by Levy Jäger, MD, of the Institute of Primary Care at the University Hospital Zurich in Zurich, Switzerland, and published online on August 5 in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
Researchers had little access to details surrounding gastrointestinal risk factors or diet information. Researchers had no access to the presenting symptoms of patients through FIRE.
DISCLOSURES:
No disclosures were reported.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
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