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Blood, 1 April 2008, Vol. 111, No. 7, pp. 3896.

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CORRESPONDENCE

Screening for hemochromatosis

To the editor:

In their recent article, Waalen et al1 address an important question connected to screening programs for hemochromatosis: How to find the individuals that would benefit from treatment. Based on their own results and those of others,1,2 including ours,3,4 they recommend serum ferritin as a better screening test than transferrin saturation (TS) for detecting clinically significant hemochromatosis (defined as C282Y homozygotes at risk for liver cirrhosis, that is, serum ferritin above 1000 µg/L). According to Waalen et al1 our phenotypic screening of 65 238 unselected individuals in a geographically stable Norwegian population, using TS as the primary test,3 "would only have detected approximately one-half of the C282Y homozygotes." This statement may be true for women, but is definitely not correct for men. By genotyping subjects with confirmed high TS, we estimated a C282Y homozygous prevalence of 0.68% in the male population,3 a figure virtually identical to a prevalence estimate of 0.67% (allele frequency 0.081) based on genotyping 3050 randomly selected subjects from the same general population.5 Thus, our screening with TS picked up very close to 100% of homozygous men.

In the Norwegian study, 70% (32 of 46 individuals) of those with ferritin above 1000 µg/L were C282Y homozygotes (Table 1), compared with the 34% (20 of 59 individuals) in the material of Waalen et al.1 Thus, if the primary goal of the screening is to detect C282Y homozygotes with serum ferritin above 1000 µg/L, a prescreening with TS or the equivalent test unsaturated iron binding capacity (UIBC) obviously increases the positive predictive value compared with serum ferritin alone. Reserving serum ferritin testing for men and women with TS above 45% would detect all C282Y homozygous subjects with high serum ferritin in the Waalen et al material.1 This procedure would also be less expensive, as TS and UIBC tests are cheaper than serum ferritin.6 However, the serum ferritin limit of 1000 µg/L may not be optimal. Among 12 C282Y homozygous subjects with liver fibrosis and/or cirrhosis we detected 4 subjects (including 1 with possible cirrhosis) with serum ferritin well below 1000 µg/L (range 311-629 µg/L).3


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Table 1. Findings in 46 subjects with serum ferritin above 1000 µg/L

 
On the other hand, if the primary goal is to find all subjects with serum ferritin levels above 1000 µg/L and treatable diseases, then measuring serum ferritin would be the right thing to do. However, the utility of screening for all causes of serum ferritin above 1000 µg/L is unknown. And then again, it would not be screening for hemochromatosis.

Lastly, Waalen et al argue that using serum ferritin as the screening test may reduce the anxiety of screening.1 The opposite may also be true: Knowing that you screened negative but your serum ferritin level was 900 µg/L might not be very reassuring.

In our opinion, the present knowledge does not support the statement of Waalen et al1 that "the use of serum ferritin as a screening tool for hemochromatosis seems well worth implementing."

Authorship

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Correspondence: Arne Åsberg, Department of Clinical Chemistry, Trondheim University Hospital, N-7006 Trondheim, Norway; e-mail: arne.aasberg{at}stolav.no.

Arne Åsberg, Ketil Thorstensen, Wenche Irgens, and Kristian Hveem

References

  1. Waalen J, Felitti VJ, Gelbart T, Beutler E. Screening for hemochromatosis by measuring ferritin levels: a more effective approach. Blood 2008; 111:3373–3376.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  2. Beutler E, Felitti VJ, Koziol JA, Ho NJ, Gelbart T. Penetrance of 845G–> A (C282Y) HFE hereditary haemochromatosis mutation in the USA. Lancet 2002; 359:211–218.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

  3. Åsberg A, Hveem K, Thorstensen K, et al. Screening for hemochromatosis: high prevalence and low morbidity in an unselected population of 65,238 persons. Scand J Gastroenterol 2001; 36:1108–1115.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

  4. Åsberg A, Hveem K, Krüger O, Bjerve KS. Persons with screening-detected haemochromatosis: as healthy as the general population? Scand J Gastroenterol 2002; 37:719–724.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

  5. Aamodt AH, Stovner LJ, Thorstensen K, Lydersen S, White LR, Aasly JO. Prevalence of haemochromatosis gene mutations in Parkinson's disease. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2007; 78:315–317.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  6. Adams PC, Reboussin DM, Leiendecker-Foster C, et al. Comparison of the unsaturated iron-binding capacity with transferrin saturation as a screening test to detect C282Y homozygotes for hemochromatosis in 101,168 participants in the hemochromatosis and iron overload screening (HEIRS) study. Clin Chem 2005; 51:1048–1052.[Free Full Text]


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Related Articles in Blood Online:

Response: Screening for treatable disease is better than just screening for hemochromatosis
Jill Waalen, Vincent J. Felitti, Terri Gelbart, and Ernest Beutler
Blood 2008 111: 3897. [Full Text] [PDF]

Screening for hemochromatosis by measuring ferritin levels: a more effective approach
Jill Waalen, Vincent J. Felitti, Terri Gelbart, and Ernest Beutler
Blood 2008 111: 3373-3376. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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