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Ferritin

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Primary Iron Storage Protein – Best Marker for Iron Stores, Iron Deficiency & Inflammation)

Synonyms

  • Ferritin
  • Serum ferritin
  • Iron-storage protein
  • Intracellular iron-binding protein
  • FTN / FERR

Units of Measurement

  • nmol/L
  • pmol/L
  • µg/L
  • µg/dL
  • µg/100 mL
  • µg%
  • ng/mL

Key Conversions

1 ng/mL = 1 µg/L
1 ng/mL = 2.247 pmol/L
1 µg/dL = 10 ng/mL
µg/100 mL = µg% = µg/dL

(Ferritin MW varies by isoform; clinical labs use WHO standard conversion: 1 ng/mL ≈ 2.247 pmol/L)

Description

Ferritin is the main intracellular iron storage protein, found primarily in:

  • Liver
  • Spleen
  • Bone marrow
  • Reticuloendothelial system

A small amount circulates in serum.
Serum ferritin directly reflects body iron stores, making it the best test for iron deficiency.

Ferritin also behaves as an acute-phase reactant, increasing in inflammation. 

Physiological Role

Ferritin stores iron in a safe, non-toxic form and releases it in a controlled manner for:

  • Hemoglobin synthesis
  • Myoglobin production
  • Enzyme systems
  • Cellular metabolism

Ferritin increases with inflammation via IL-6–mediated upregulation.

Clinical Significance

Low Ferritin (Most Important)

Low ferritin = Iron deficiency until proven otherwise.

Causes:

  • Nutritional iron deficiency
  • Chronic blood loss
  • Menstruation
  • Pregnancy
  • Malabsorption (celiac, IBD)
  • Bariatric surgery
  • Hookworm infection
  • Chronic diseases affecting intake/absorption

Symptoms:

  • Fatigue
  • Pallor
  • Hair loss
  • Restless legs
  • Pica
  • Weakness

Ferritin < 15 ng/mL → Diagnostic of iron deficiency
Ferritin < 30 ng/mL → Strongly suggests deficiency even with inflammation

High Ferritin

Ferritin rises due to:

  • Iron overload
  • Inflammation
  • Liver disease
  • Malignancy

1. Iron Overload Disorders

  • Hemochromatosis
  • Multiple transfusions
  • Thalassemia major
  • Sideroblastic anemia

2. Inflammation / Infection

Ferritin is an acute-phase reactant → rises in:

  • Chronic infections
  • Autoimmune diseases
  • CKD
  • Rheumatologic conditions

3. Liver Disease

High ferritin due to hepatocyte leakage:

  • Alcoholic liver disease
  • NAFLD/NASH
  • Cirrhosis

4. Malignancies

  • Leukemia
  • Lymphoma
  • Solid tumors

5. Critical Illness

Extremely high levels (>10,000 ng/mL) seen in:

  • HLH (hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis)
  • MAS (macrophage activation syndrome)
  • Severe sepsis
  • COVID-19 cytokine storm

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + WHO + AACE + Mayo + ARUP)

Adults

GroupReference Range
Men30 – 400 ng/mL
Women (premenopausal)15 – 150 ng/mL
Women (postmenopausal)30 – 300 ng/mL

Children

AgeFerritin
1–5 years10 – 60 ng/mL
6–15 years10 – 100 ng/mL
Adolescents15 – 150 ng/mL

(Ranges depend on lab assay & population.)

Clinical cutoffs

  • <15 ng/mL → iron deficiency
  • <30 ng/mL → probable iron deficiency
  • >300–400 ng/mL → consider iron overload
  • >1000 ng/mL → significant iron overload or severe inflammation
  • >10,000 ng/mL → think of HLH/MAS

Diagnostic Uses

1. Best Test for Iron Deficiency

Ferritin is the first-line investigation.

2. Iron Overload Disorders

Used with:

  • Transferrin saturation
  • Serum iron
  • Genetic testing (HFE mutations)

3. Inflammatory Diseases

Interpret cautiously - inflammation raises ferritin.

4. Monitoring Iron Therapy

Ferritin guides:

  • Oral iron therapy duration
  • IV iron therapy adequacy

5. Critical Illness Marker

Very high ferritin suggests:

  • HLH
  • Sepsis-associated inflammation
  • MAS

Analytical Notes

  • Immunoassays commonly used
  • Hemolysis minimally affects ferritin
  • Inflammation increases ferritin → check CRP concurrently
  • Pregnancy reduces ferritin due to increased iron demand

Clinical Pearls

  • Ferritin is the earliest marker to fall in iron deficiency - even before hemoglobin drops.
  • Ferritin <30 ng/mL is highly sensitive for iron deficiency in adults.
  • High ferritin does not always mean iron overload; inflammation is the most common cause.
  • Always interpret ferritin with CRP, transferrin saturation, and iron studies.
  • Ferritin >10,000 ng/mL is a red-flag for HLH/MAS.

Interesting Fact

Each ferritin molecule can store up to 4500 iron atoms, making it the body’s most efficient iron reservoir.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Iron Metabolism.
  2. WHO Guidelines - Iron Deficiency Assessment.
  3. AACE/ACE Clinical Practice Guidelines - Iron Disorders.
  4. BCSH Hematology Standards - Iron Deficiency.
  5. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Ferritin.
  6. ARUP Consult - Iron Studies Interpretation.
  7. MedlinePlus / NIH - Ferritin Test.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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