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. 2020 Jun 4;3(2):188–193. doi: 10.3138/canlivj.2019-0013

Table 1:

Normal TS and elevated SF in 58 referred HFE p.C282Y homozygotes with normal TS and elevated SF

Gender Normal TS and elevated SF, n (%)* SF, µg/L, M (range) TS, %, M (range) Age at diagnosis, y, M (range) Iron removed, g, M (range), n Patients with iron removed ≥3 g, n (%) Hepatic iron, µmol/g, M (range), n Cirrhosis, n
Men 33 (6.3) 1,079 (439–5,844) 39 (31–49) 50 (19–74) 7.1 (1.5–26), 20 15/20 (75) 257 (89–663), 6 2
Women 25 (6.4) 372 (202–793) 36 (13–43) 52 (29–77) 2.5 (0.5–3.5), 8 5/8 (63) 52 (29, 76), 2 1

*Normal TS: <50% for men, <45% for women. Elevated ferritin: >300 µg/L for men, >200 µg/L for women. These 58 patients represented 6.3% of 917 referred HFE p.C282Y homozygotes (527 men, 390 women).

† Iron overload was defined as ≥3 g iron removed by phlebotomy to achieve iron depletion.

‡ Reference range for liver iron is 0–35 µmol/g dry weight. Liver iron was >35 µmol/g dry weight in 7 of 8 patients so tested (87.5%).

TS = transferrin saturation; SF = serum ferritin; HFE = high-iron gene