Anaemia (weak blood) in adults
- Common in all adults. More common in women
- Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) most common cause
- Blood loss from gut is the most important cause of IDA in postmenopausal women and men of any age — need to test for cancer in these groups
Check
- Take blood for FBC if
- Very tired
- Short of breath with exercise
- Rectal bleeding
- Heavy menstrual periods
- Gut symptoms, eg chronic abdominal pain, recurrent loose faeces
Diagnosis
- Men — Hb less than 130g/L
- Women
- Not pregnant and more than 6 weeks postnatal — Hb less than 120g/L
- Up to 6 weeks postnatal — Hb less than 110g/L
- Pregnant — Hb less than 110g/L — see Anaemia in pregnancy
To confirm diagnosis and cause
- Take blood for serum ferritin, CRP, serum B12, folate, TFT, LFT
- Take blood for UEC if not done in previous 12 months
- Faecal blood test
Interpreting results
- Serum ferritin 30microgram/L or less — confirms iron deficiency anaemia (IDA)
- Serum ferritin more than 30microgram/L but less than 100microgram/L — possible IDA, or anaemia of chronic disease (inflammation)
- Serum ferritin 100microgram/L or more — IDA unlikely — consider other causes
- If unclear if IDA or other cause of anaemia
- Medical consult — talk with haematologist about other tests needed
- If anaemia confirmed as B12 or folate deficiency
- Treat with appropriate supplements — medical consult
IDA confirmed on testing
Ask
- Iron in diet — meat consumption, on any special diet
- Gut symptoms — chronic abdominal pain, recurrent loose faeces
- Medicines — aspirin, NSAID, warfarin, apixaban, rivaroxaban
- Rectal bleeding
- Ceremonial practices
- Menstrual periods
- Family history of bowel cancer
Do
- Medical consult
- Give iron replacement
- Oral iron is sufficient for chronic kidney disease if early stages and not on dialysis. If not working — medical consult for IV iron
- If on dialysis — IV iron — medical/renal consult
- If from area where hookworm is/has been common — give albendazole oral — adult 400mg single dose
- Do not give in first trimester of pregnancy (urine pregnancy test if not sure) without medical consult
- Talk about healthy food choices
- If gut symptoms
- Rectal bleeding or family history of bowel cancer — consider colonoscopy
- Upper gastrointestinal symptoms — consider gastroscopy
- If female of childbearing age — offer urine pregnancy test
- If over 40 years or not responding to treatment — gastroscopy and colonoscopy to exclude cancer
Iron replacement
Oral iron
- Iron oral — 60–120mg elemental iron a day. Consider alternate day dosing
- Give Vitamin C to optimise iron absorption
- If required reduce gut side effects by taking at night or with food — absorption is reduced with food
- Repeat FBC in 4 weeks
- Need to continue to take iron for 3 months after Hb returns to normal
- If Hb not improving
- Consider reason — tablets not being taken, ongoing blood loss, inflammation
- May need IV iron infusion
- Repeat FBC at 12 weeks
- If Hb still low — medical consult
Iron IV infusion
Use if oral iron doesn’t work or can’t be used — medical consult
- Do not use if signs of infection
- Do not restart oral iron until at least 5 days after infusion given
- Do not give more than 20mL (1,000mg) in a single dose. Give second dose at least 1 week after first
- Ferric (iron) carboxymaltose (eg Ferinject) IV infusion can be given if
- Prescribed by doctor
- Anaphylaxis kit and resuscitation equipment available
- Clinician trained in life support AND stays with person during infusion
- Discuss risk of IV iron — injection site reaction and paravenous (surrounding tissue of vein) leakage causing skin staining
- Can safely be administered by
- Slow IV bolus injection
- IV infusion using a gravity feed giving set
- IV infusion using an IV infusion pump
- See — Giving iron by IV infusion
Table 7.6 Cumulative Iron Dose Calculation by weight and Hb level for Ferric Carboxymaltose (eg Ferinject)