S. Kuvibidila et al., USEFULNESS OF SERUM FERRITIN LEVELS IN THE ASSESSMENT OF IRON STATUS IN NONPREGNANT ZAIREAN WOMEN OF CHILDBEARING AGE, Journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 97(3), 1994, pp. 171-179
We studied the usefulness of serum ferritin for the assessment of iron
deficiency (ID) or ID anaemia (IDA) of 186 lactating and 27 non-lacta
ting Zairean women (15-45 years old). Haemoglobin (Hb), serum iron (SI
), total iron binding capacity (TIBC), and transferrin saturation (TS)
were also measured. Participants were recruited in rural Bas-Zaire St
ate in the summers of 1986 and 1989. Serum ferritin ranged from 10 to
360 mu g 1(-1) (median 62 mu g 1(-1)) in lactating women and from 14.2
to 120 mu g 1(-1) (median 40 mu g 1(-1)) in non-lactating women. Whil
e mean levels of serum ferritin and TS were within the normal range in
both groups of women, those of Hb were below normal (<12 g dl(-1)), p
artly due to inflammation. The prevalence of anaemia was 66% in lactat
ing women and 70% in non-lactating women, and did not change with time
. It was higher in women with inflammation than in those without infla
mmation. Although ID (ferritin <12 mu g 1(-1)) was almost absent, afte
r raising the cut-off point of ferritin to 50 mu g 1(-1) in women with
inflammation, it was present in 28.8% of lactating women and 52% of n
on-lactating women. While the prevalence of ID assessed by serum ferri
tin was significantly higher in lactating women studied in 1989 (40.5%
) than in those studied in 1986 (13.5%), it was similar in both groups
of non-lactating women. ID defined by TS <16% was present in 41% of l
actating women and 21% of non-lactating women. In the presence as well
as absence of inflammation, the use of TS identified a higher percent
age of lactating women with either ID or IDA than did the use of serum
ferritin. We conclude that, in the studied population, unless inflamm
ation is taken into consideration, serum ferritin has a limited value
in the diagnosis of ID.