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Beckman Coulter Launches Soluble Transferrin Receptor Assay - A Differentiator for Diagnosing Iron Deficiency Anaemia
Anaemia is a worldwide health issue which can have a profound
effect on their quality of life. The most common cause is iron deficiency, estimated
to be responsible for 50% of all anaemia cases
Iron Deficiency Anaemia (IDA) negatively impacts the cognitive
and physical development of children as well as the work productivity of adults.
In surgical patients, it may increase the risk of postoperative morbidity and
death. IDA is the most common nutritional deficiency, affecting a quarter of
the world's population. In most cases it can be treated simply with iron once
the body's iron status is ascertained. The standard tests for establishing IDA
include measuring serum ferritin, serum iron and iron binding capacity.
However, these analytes are unreliable when there is inflammation
present, as commonly occurs in chronic diseases. In fact, inflammation is a
frequent confounder because chronic disease is the second most common cause
of anaemia. Anaemia of Chronic Disease (ACD), also known as anaemia of chronic
inflammation, occurs with infections, cancer, autoimmune disease and chronic
kidney disease. ACD can present with or without iron deficiency and its treatment
will depend on its cause.
A highly accurate automated laboratory test detecting a biomarker
that is not affected by inflammation could be a more reliable method of assessing
the body's iron status in the presence of ACD. One such assay would measure
serum soluble Transferrin receptor (sTfR) concentration. This marker increases
in patients with IDA in response to the demand for iron by the erythroid progenitor
cells, making it better suited than other available markers for investigation
of IDA.
Regulation & transport of iron
Iron balance is maintained by regulation of intestinal iron
absorption. After absorption by enterocytes, iron binds to the blood protein
transferrin, which transports the iron in the blood and delivers it to target
cells. The iron-laden transferrin binds to specific membrane receptors on these
cells - the Transferring Receptor (TfR).
TfR is a homodimer of two 95 kDa subunits linked by disulphide
bonds [Figure 1]. Each monomer has a 61 amino acid N-terminal cytoplasmic domain,
a short transmembrane region, and a large extracellular domain of 671 residues.
Each TfR can bind up to two iron-laden transferrin molecules.
Transferrin receptors are present on nearly every cell type,
with the largest numbers found in the erythron, placenta and liver. When a cell
needs iron, transferrin receptor production increases to augment receptor expression
on the cell surface, thereby facilitating iron uptake. The major site of iron
utilisation is the bone marrow, where erythrocyte precursors absorb the iron
and incorporate it into haemoglobin. In normal adults, approximately 80 per
cent of transferring receptors are associated with erythroid progenitor cells
in the bone marrow.
The number of receptors decline as erythroid progenitors
mature, lower levels are present during the reticulocyte stage and they are
essentially absent in mature red cells.
When transferrin binds to the TfR, both the receptor and
the iron-transferrin complex is internalised, and iron is released into the
cytoplasm of the cell. In erythroid cells, most iron is incorporated into protoporphyrin
(haeme). In nonerythroid cells, iron is stored as ferritin and haemosiderin,
a complex of ferritin and denatured ferritin. Both transferrin and TfR are recycled
to the cell surface for additional iron binding and uptake.
At the end of their life, red blood cells are destroyed by
macrophages, which recycle iron from the haeme fraction of haemoglobin and transferrin
once again transports the iron to target cells.
Current Diagnostic Challenges
The diagnosis of iron deficiency includes the evaluation
of the body's iron status using laboratory tests to measure serum iron, transferrin,
ferritin and transferrin saturation, as well as assessing haematological parameters.
Serum iron levels do not fall until iron stores are depleted.
Extra iron is stored in hepatocytes and macrophages of the reticuloendothelial
system. When these stores are depleted, serum iron level will fall below 50
µg/ dL, while transferrin increases linearly. As transferrin increases,
transferrin saturation falls below 20per cent.
Serum ferritin is a marker of iron storage, and therefore
levels will fall in IDA. A value lower than 22 ng/mL is generally considered
an indicator of depleted iron stores in a healthy individual, but some researchers
have suggested that a higher cut-off of 30 ng/mL may be better for identifying
IDA. However, several clinical conditions are known to trigger an increase in
ferritin levels irrespective of iron status such as hyperthyroidism, hepatocellular
disease, acute bacterial infections, as well as alcohol consumption or the use
of oral contraceptives.
IDA can be masked if it presents with ACD because ferritin
values are not decreased, as they would be with IDA alone, and may be as high
as 51-100 ng/mL [11]. Ferritin levels cannot therefore be used to diagnose IDA
in the presence of ACD where the anaemia is not only caused by a lack of iron,
but also because the iron stored in the hepatocytes and macrophages of the reticuloendothelial
system is prevented from being loaded onto transferrin.
Role of Soluble Transferrin Receptor
Another parameter that can be used to assess iron status
is soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR). sTfR results from the proteolysis of
TfR at a specific site in the extracellular domain, producing fragments that
circulate in the blood complexed to ferritin.
The amount of total, cellular TfR is directly proportional
to the concentration of sTfR in plasma or serum, and so sTfR in the plasma accurately
reflects the total TfR. Because most TfRs are located on erythroid progenitors,
the concentration of sTfR is believed to reflect erythroid turnover, and is
determined by the erythroid proliferation rate and iron demand.
sTfR increases in haemolytic anaemia, reflecting the raised
number of erythroid cells, and in IDA due to an increased iron demand for erythropoiesis.
A reduced level of sTfR is typically seen in aplastic anaemia and renal failure
as erythroid cell mass is reduced.
The inclusion of an sTfR assay when assessing a patient with
suspected anaemia can provide a clearer picture of both the cause and the most
appropriate treatment. The only automated immunoassay system to offer sTfR as
part of a complete panel for speed and consistency is the Beckman Coulter Access
Immunoassay System.
Differential Diagnosis of IDA & ACD
ACD is associated with mild to moderately decreased haemoglobin.
Red cell production is suppressed by inflammatory cytokines and in some cases
lower production of erythropoietin, resulting in a low reticulocyte count. However,
a definitive diagnosis may be difficult because of coexisting conditions, such
as iron deficiency, blood loss, effects of medications or the presence of variant
haemoglobin forms such as in the thalassaemias.
The ACD may be microcytic and, particularly in conditions
such as rheumatoid arthritis, gastric bleeding due to use of aspirin or other
Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) may be a factor. With both anaemia
of chronic disease and IDA as well as a combination of both conditions, the
serum concentration of iron and transferring saturation may be reduced due to
the cytokine effects.
To rule out coexisting IDA, whole-body iron status needs
to be assessed, but the results of standard measures, such as the acute phase
reactant ferritin, total iron-binding capacity and serum iron may be affected
by the chronic disease state. In contrast, sTfR is not correlated with inflammatory
parameters like erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein (CRP).
sTfR will be elevated only if there is iron deficiency or increased red cell
production as in haemolytic anaemia.
The sTfR/log ferritin index has an even higher specificity
and sensitivity for IDA in ACD than sTfR alone. This calculation can be carried
out in the derived result function on the Access systems, or manually.
Only the Access system offers automated on-board calculation of the sTfR index
from the sTfR and ferritin results, giving the index value quickly and accurately,
and removing the chance of clerical error.
Patients with ACD alone do not necessarily need iron therapy.
The cause of the inflammation should be promptly identified and treated due
to the critical nature of this issue. A physician runs the risk of missing a
bleeding ulcer or other significant disorder at great cost to the patient.
A useful algorithm indicating how the different causes of
anaemia can be identified has been developed [Figure 2]. Table 1 shows the likely
results of standard laboratory assays used to determine the iron status of patients
with a chronic disease, and highlights the difficulties in determining the cause
of anaemia.
Identifying Subclinical (latent) Iron Deficiency
As well as being a useful marker for determining whether
or not iron deficiency exists in ACD, sTfR can also confirm suspected iron deficiency
early in the condition. Again, the sTfR Index provides an even better indicator
for subclinical iron deficiency than sTfR alone. Groups most at risk of this
include women of child bearing age, young children and the elderly.
These populations may have normal haemoglobin but low or
borderline ferritin and/or high or borderline transferrin. Elevated sTfR concentration
(or index) will be a good indicator of early iron-deficient erythropoiesis until
the storage deficit becomes sufficient to restrict synthesis of haemoglobin.
sTfR monitoring of erythropoiesis & other applications
As well as helping identify iron deficiency, sTfR is useful
for monitoring erythropoiesis in malignancy and chronic renal disease. Development
of erythropoiesis following bone marrow or stem cell transplantation is determined
by the overall marrow proliferative capacity, which can be monitored with sTfR
[16, 18]. During the aplastic period prior to transplantation, sTfR levels decline.
Once erythropoiesis has recovered, sTfR levels return to normal values.
In anaemia of chronic renal failure, the early increase in
sTfR values after starting recombinant human erythropoietin therapy is useful
for predicting and assessing haematologic response to therapy. The change in
sTfR levels occurs well before any change in haematocrit or haemoglobin values
can be detected, allowing early adjustments in erythropoietin dosage and iron
supplementation therapy.
In one clinical study of haemodialysis patients, a 20 per
cent increase in sTfR was strongly associated with a response to recombinant
erythropoietin therapy. A second study demonstrated that baseline and testing
of sTfR in two week increments, combined with baseline testing of serum erythropoietin,
increased the overall accuracy of predicting response to therapy.
sTfR and the sTfR/ferritin ratio also appear to have other
useful application. A recent study indicated that the sTfR/ferritin ratio can
discriminate between anaemic patients with and without coeliac disease. Subclinical
iron deficiency in early pregnancy is strongly associated with bacterial vaginosis,
and therefore sTfR and the sTfR/log ferritin index also might have a role in
highlighting the risk of this condition. The sTfR/log ferritin index has also
been shown to be superior to routine tests for predicting the response to iron
therapy in long-term haemodialysis patients, and in discriminating between patients
with iron deficiency and various haemoglobinopathies.
The Impact of sTfR on Patient Outcomes
Although most cases of anaemia can be treated easily, the
condition still has a negative impact on the patient's quality of life. This
is because, historically, pinpointing the cause to allow effective treatment
could be difficult. Standard biological markers of iron status are influenced
by inflammatory processes, so in patients with ACD any coexisting iron deficiency
can remain masked. In addition, these assays are not sensitive enough to identify
IDA in its earliest stages.
Serum sTfR also reflects the rate of erythroid proliferation
and iron demand but as sTfR is not an acute phase reactant it is unaffected
by inflammatory process. sTfR is therefore a useful addition to the existing
anaemia assays. Systems able to calculate the sTfR/log ferritin ratio automatically
provide a statistically superior diagnostic aid when compared to sTfR alone.
It also has an important role in monitoring erythropoiesis as a determinant
of response to therapy following bone marrow or stem cell transplantation and
in chronic renal disease. The automated sTfR assay offering clinical cut-off
information enables clinicians to obtain a more complete picture of the body's
iron status, and so improve the speed of diagnosis and recovery.
Contact: sshah@beckman.com
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