BMJ  2007;334:259 (3 February), doi:10.1136/bmj.39003.602338.94

Practice

10-minute consultation

Newly diagnosed iron deficiency anaemia in a premenopausal woman

Tony Todd, specialist registrar in haematology1, Tim Caroe, portfolio general practitioner2

1 Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge CB2 2QQ, 2 General Practice and Primary Care Research Unit, University of Cambridge

Correspondence to: T Todd tony.todd{at}addenbrookes.nhs.uk

A 40 year old woman with persistent fatigue has come back to you for the results of blood tests. The results show a hypochromic, microcytic anaemia with a haemoglobin concentration of 100 g/l and a ferritin concentration of 5 µg/l, the classic features of iron deficiency anaemia (IDA).

What issues you should cover

Symptoms of anaemia
Fatigue and mild dyspnoea after exertion may be the only symptoms in otherwise healthy people with slow onset anaemia. More serious symptoms such as angina, marked ankle oedema, or dyspnoea at rest don't generally occur unless the haemoglobin concentration is less than about 70 g/l. Presence of such symptoms in a case like this indicate additional cardiorespiratory pathology.

Causes of the anaemia
Blood loss—Seek any history of haemorrhage. In the 5-10% of premenopausal women who develop IDA the commonest cause is menorrhagia. For reliable assessment simple pictogram charts may be better than subjective reporting.

Coeliac disease—In younger patients coeliac disease often presents with IDA, especially in women aged 20-40. Pay attention to gastrointestinal symptoms, including unexplained weight loss, diarrhoea, and abdominal pain.

Drug use—Some drugs, such as anticoagulants, aspirin, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, may cause or exacerbate blood loss. Warfarin may worsen menstrual bleeding but rarely causes other major chronic haemorrhage (such as gut or genitourinary bleeding) without additional pathology. Warfarin may, therefore, be unmasking another pathology, and you should still seek an underlying cause of IDA.

Other history—Consider recent pregnancy, breast feeding, and blood donation. Pregnancy induced IDA usually resolves rapidly after birth but may persist in women from low income groups who have a poor diet, especially if they are breast feeding. Frequency of blood donation is limited to prevent IDA, but it may still occur, as in premenopausal women each unit contains about a tenth of the average amount of body iron.

Diet—In the United Kingdom IDA unrelated to pregnancy is rarely caused by poor diet, as major deficiency would arise only after several years without any food that contains iron (meat, leafy green vegetables).

Features of iron deficiency
Some classic features of IDA—koilonychia, angular stomatitis, and glossitis—are rare but distressing. They resolve on treatment.


Key points
  • Iron deficiency is not a final diagnosis—you must identify and treat the underlying causes
  • In premenopausal women, particularly consider menorrhagia (a simple visual scoring systems may help in assessment) and coeliac disease
  • Poor diet and warfarin use are rarely sole causes
  • A significant response should occur within three weeks of treatment starting



Useful reading
British Society of Gastroenterology. Guidelines for the management of iron deficiency anaemia. www.bsg.org.uk/pdf_word_docs/iron_def.pdf
NHS National Library for Health. Iron deficiency anaemia. www.prodigy.nhs.uk/patient_information/pils/anaemia_due_to_iron_deficiency.htm (a helpful information leaflet for patients)


What you should do

  • No degree of IDA should be ignored. Audits show that iron deficiency is underinvestigated and that serious illness can be missed. Even when a cause seems clear, failure to respond to treatment should raise suspicion of alternative causes.
  • Refer appropriately in cases of abnormal blood loss. Referral to gastroenterology is indicated if she has gastrointestinal symptoms, obvious gastrointestinal blood loss, or a strong family history of colorectal carcinoma (such as two first degree relatives or one first degree relative aged <45 years). Gastrointestinal referral is not needed in asymptomatic women under 50 unless they don't respond to adequate iron supplementation and treatment of other identified causes. In women 4% of cases of IDA are due to coeliac disease, which may otherwise be asymptomatic. Women with relevant symptoms, those whose IDA lacks an apparent cause, and those who don't respond to iron treatment should be tested for anti-endomysial or anti-transglutaminase antibodies. Faecal occult blood testing is unpleasant and of little diagnostic value.
  • Treat identified underlying causes. Start replacement treatment with ferrous sulphate 200 mg three times a day (ferrous gluconate and ferrous fumarate are alternatives). Continue for three months after the anaemia resolves to fully replenish stores. Avoid slow release preparations, as these release most of their iron after passing the small bowel absorption site.
  • Warn her of side effects of taking iron (constipation and black stool) and stress the importance of adherence. Also explain that IDA is a consequence of something else that iron alone won't treat and that this needs proper investigation and treatment.
  • Arrange a follow-up full blood count and consultation in three weeks. A rise of haemoglobin by then of <20 g/l indicates a problem with adherence, malabsorption, or continuing blood loss.


This is part of a series of occasional articles on common problems in primary care

The BMJ welcomes contributions from general practitioners to the series

Rapid Responses:

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