In this issue of Blood, Ferrucci and colleagues continue their important exploration of anemia in the elderly and its causes.1 

Along with other groups,2  the authors previously reported that the prevalence of anemia was an astonishing 10% in those older than age 65. But the further surprise was the belated recognition that even mild anemia, at levels that most hematologists tended to ignore (hemoglobin > 110 g/L), was associated with a serious increase in morbidity and mortality, as well as impaired exercise capacity, impaired cognition, and a general decrease in measurements of quality of life.1  Therefore, correcting this anemia would be a good idea and, as hematologists, it is hoped that we are taught to do this by identifying and treating its cause. But identifying the cause(s) of anemia in our elderly patients with numerous comorbidities is frequently complicated. The major causes appear to be chronic kidney disease, iron deficiency anemia (IDA) likely due to subtle blood loss, and inflammatory diseases causing the well-known hematologic entity anemia of chronic disease (ACD), now called anemia of chronic inflammation(ACI).1,3  Sadly, there is an additional large category noted by every group that has studied these patients called UA (undiagnosed anemia) that accounts for 30% to 60% of patients. Patients with UA are clearly hypoproliferative but otherwise do not fit into any recognized category or cause of anemia.4 

It is these important clinical problems of ACD/ACI and possibly UA in the elderly that Ferrucci et al have chosen to address.5  Their approach is based in part on the prior recognition that aging per se is a mild proinflammatory state,6  with the elderly showing significant elevation of inflammatory markers like CRP and IL-6. The current paper is based on a well-characterized population of anemic and nonanemic community-dwelling Italians.5  In addition to the usual measurements for analyzing anemia, the authors added measurement of urinary hepcidin. Hepcidin is a newly identified peptide that, stimulated by inflammation, particularly IL-6, acts to block iron absorption from the gut and iron release from macrophages, thus causing a fall in serum iron.7  This hypoferremia presumably deprives infecting organisms of needed iron8  and thus was of benefit during our evolution when most inflammation was caused by infection. Because hepcidin release is stimulated by inflammation and inhibited by iron deficiency, it was hypothesized that measurement of hepcidin in these anemic elderly persons would unambiguously identify patients with ACD/ACI (hepcidin elevated),6  and those with iron deficiency anemia (hepcidin low). And just possibly if hepcidin were found to be elevated in those patients with UA, we might be able to conclude that the mysterious UA was a forme fruste of ACD/ACI, and a manifestation of the proinflammatory state of aging.

Because the paper deals with ACD/ACI, it is pertinent to note the practical difficulty in making the diagnosis of ACD/ACI unless there is a very obvious and substantial inflammatory insult. The usual clinical measures of serum iron, transferrin (not available in this paper), percent saturation (also not available), and ferritin are useful in uncomplicated clinical situations but can be ambiguous, particularly in the face of coexisting iron deficiency.9,10  One approach to this diagnostic and therefore therapeutic problem is to use the ratio of serum transferrin receptor (sTfR, a good marker of overall erythropoiesis) divided by the log of the ferritin. This ratio was used apparently effectively in this paper to help distinguish between IDA and ACD/ACI. Therefore, the more general clinical use of this ratio would seem reasonable; however, the problem is that several commercial laboratories offer assay of sTfR, but they use different antibodies with different results. I suspect that the authors also wondered whether measurement of hepcidin would help resolve this diagnostic difficulty by providing an unambiguous marker of an inflammatory state and possibly even a proinflammatory state.

The findings are quite robust but I suspect were a bit of a surprise. Urinary hepcidin (serum measurements are now available) was low as anticipated in subjects with IDA as defined by low ferritin, high ratio of sTfR/log ferritin, as well as slightly low serum iron. But the hypothesis that urinary hepcidin would be increased in subjects with ACD/ACI as characterized clinically and by hypoferremia without evidence of iron deficiency, and by elevated CRP and IL-6 levels, was a bust. Further, the strong in vitro link between IL-6 and hepcidin release was not supported in these subjects considering that elevated levels of IL-6 were not associated with elevated urinary hepcidin. Further, the data provided challenge the idea that hepcidin is the master regulator of iron balance because hypoferremia in subjects with elevated CRP and IL-6 levels was not accompanied by elevated urinary hepcidin. So something other than hepcidin caused the serum iron to fall. The category of UA remains unsolved. Curiously, the subjects with chronic kidney disease had the highest levels of inflammatory markers. One wonders what sorts of renal diseases were represented.

What are the take-home messages? For the scientists, sure, hepcidin is a key player in the very important metabolism of iron, but other modulators and cytokines appear to be involved in controlling the level of serum iron. Further, only very overt sorts of inflammation lead to an increase in hepcidin. So what are the more subtle inflammatory signals that lead to an increase in IL-6 and CRP and possibly also ACD/ACI? For clinicians who provide care for these sorts of patients, UA remains unsolved. The diagnosis of ACD/ACI in the elderly is a work in progress, but if we could standardize the measurement of sTfR, the use of the ratio of sTfR/log ferritin would be helpful. Correlation with CRP and IL-6 may provide needed support for the diagnosis of ACI. And last, we still do not know whether correcting the anemia will correct some or all of the possible anemia-associated pathophysiologic events.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author declares no competing financial interests. ■

1
Guralnik
 
JM
Eisenstaedt
 
RS
Ferrucci
 
L
Klein
 
HG
Woodman
 
RC
Prevalence of anemia in persons 65 years and older in the United States: evidence for a high rate of unexplained anemia.
Blood
2004
, vol. 
104
 
8
(pg. 
2263
-
2268
)
2
Joosten
 
E
Pelemans
 
W
Hiele
 
M
Noyen
 
J
Verhaeghe
 
R
Boogaerts
 
MA
Prevalence and causes of anaemia in a geriatric hospitalized population.
Gerontology
1992
, vol. 
38
 
1-2
(pg. 
111
-
117
)
3
Price
 
EA
Schrier
 
SL
Anemia in the elderly: introduction.
Semin Hematol
2008
, vol. 
45
 
4
(pg. 
207
-
209
)
4
Makipour
 
S
Kanapuru
 
B
Ershler
 
WB
Unexplained anemia in the elderly.
Semin Hematol
2008
, vol. 
45
 
4
(pg. 
250
-
254
)
5
Ferrucci
 
L
Semba
 
RD
Guralnik
 
JM
, et al. 
Proinflammatory state, hepcidin, and anemia in older persons.
Blood
2010
, vol. 
115
 
18
(pg. 
3810
-
3816
)
6
Roubenoff
 
R
Harris
 
TB
Abad
 
LW
Wilson
 
PW
Dallal
 
GE
Dinarello
 
CA
Monocyte cytokine production in an elderly population: effect of age and inflammation.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci
1998
, vol. 
53
 
1
(pg. 
M20
-
M26
)
7
Nemeth
 
E
Rivera
 
S
Gabayan
 
V
, et al. 
IL-mediates hypoferremia of inflammation by inducing the synthesis of the iron regulatory hormone hepcidin.
J Clin Invest
2004
, vol. 
113
 
9
(pg. 
1271
-
1276
)
8
Roy
 
CN
Andrews
 
NC
Anemia of inflammation: the hepcidin link.
Curr Opin Hematol
2005
, vol. 
12
 
2
(pg. 
107
-
111
)
9
Price
 
EA
Schrier
 
SL
Unexplained aspects of anemia of inflammation.
Adv Hematol
2010
, vol. 
2010
 pg. 
508739
 
10
Weiss
 
G
Goodnough
 
LT
Anemia of chronic disease.
N Engl J Med
2005
, vol. 
352
 
10
(pg. 
1011
-
1023
)
Sign in via your Institution