Unit Converter
Transferrin

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Primary Iron Transport Protein - Central Marker in Iron Deficiency, Anemia Evaluation & Nutritional Status)

Synonyms

  • Transferrin
  • Serum transferrin
  • Siderophilin
  • Beta-1 metal-binding globulin
  • Total Iron-Binding Globulin (TBG, older term - NOT Thyroxine-Binding Globulin)
  • TIBC precursor (transferrin × 25 ≈ TIBC)

Units of Measurement

  • µmol/L
  • g/L
  • mg/dL
  • mg/100 mL
  • mg%
  • mg/mL

Unit Conversions

Molecular Weight of Transferrin ≈ 79,500 Da (≈ 79.5 kDa)

µmol/L ↔ g/L

1 µmol/L=0.0795 g/L1\ \text{µmol/L} = 0.0795\ \text{g/L}1 µmol/L=0.0795 g/L 1 g/L=12.6 µmol/L1\ \text{g/L} = 12.6\ \text{µmol/L}1 g/L=12.6 µmol/L

mg/dL → g/L

1 mg/dL=0.01 g/L1\ \text{mg/dL} = 0.01\ \text{g/L}1 mg/dL=0.01 g/L

mg/100 mL = mg% = mg/dL

mg/mL → g/L

1 mg/mL=1 g/L1\ \text{mg/mL} = 1\ \text{g/L}1 mg/mL=1 g/L

Description

Transferrin is the major iron-transport glycoprotein synthesized in the liver.
Its functions include:

  • Binding ferric iron (Fe³⁺) with high affinity
  • Transporting iron to bone marrow for erythropoiesis
  • Delivering iron to tissues
  • Maintaining safe iron levels by preventing free-iron toxicity

Transferrin concentration increases in iron deficiency and decreases in chronic inflammatory states, making it a critical component of iron studies.

Physiological Role

1. Iron Transport

Each molecule carries two Fe³⁺ ions.

2. Iron Homeostasis

Prevents free-iron catalyzed oxidative damage.

3. Nutritional Marker

Reflects liver protein synthesis.

4. Component of Iron Studies Panel

Transferrin is directly linked to:

  • Total Iron-Binding Capacity (TIBC)
  • Transferrin saturation (TS%)
  • Serum iron

Clinical Significance

HIGH TRANSFERRIN

→ The body is trying to “bind more iron”-seen in low iron states.

Major Causes

1. Iron Deficiency

Early increase before anemia appears.

2. Pregnancy

Estrogen → ↑ transferrin production.

3. Oral Contraceptives / Estrogen Therapy

4. Acute Blood Loss

Reactive increase.

5. Polycythemia Vera

Pattern in Iron Deficiency

  • Serum iron ↓
  • Transferrin ↑
  • TIBC ↑
  • Transferrin saturation ↓ (<15%)

LOW TRANSFERRIN

1. Chronic Inflammatory Disease

Negative acute-phase reactant.

  • RA
  • Chronic infections
  • Malignancy

2. Liver Disease

Reduced hepatic synthesis.

3. Nephrotic Syndrome

Loss of transferrin in urine.

4. Malnutrition / Protein-Energy Deficiency

5. Hemochromatosis

Body suppresses transferrin as iron overload increases.

6. Burns, Severe Trauma, Critical Illness

7. Inherited Atransferrinemia

Very rare — severe iron overload and anemia.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + Mayo + ARUP + WHO Fe Deficiency Guidelines)

Serum Transferrin

  • 2.0 – 3.6 g/L
    or
  • 200 – 360 mg/dL
    or
  • 25 – 45 µmol/L

Interpretive Clues

ConditionTransferrin Level
Iron deficiency↑ high
Anemia of chronic disease↓ low
Liver cirrhosis↓ low
Pregnancy/OCPs
Hemochromatosis

Diagnostic Uses

1. Iron Deficiency Workup

Early and sensitive marker.

2. Differentiating Anemias

  • ↑ Transferrin → iron deficiency
  • ↓ Transferrin → chronic inflammation or iron overload

3. Iron Overload Disorders

Low transferrin is typical in:

  • Hemochromatosis
  • Hemosiderosis

4. Liver Function Evaluation

Low transferrin → impaired hepatic synthetic function.

5. Nutritional Status

Decreases with protein-energy malnutrition.

6. Monitoring in Pregnancy & Estrogen Therapy

Analytical Notes

  • Measured by immunoassay (nephelometry or turbidimetry).
  • Hemolysis has minimal effect.
  • Severe inflammation lowers transferrin (negative APR).
  • Transferrin saturation should be calculated with simultaneous serum iron.

Clinical Pearls

  • Transferrin is inverse of ferritin in iron deficiency:
    • Ferritin ↓
    • Transferrin ↑
  • Low transferrin + low iron → think anemia of chronic disease, NOT iron deficiency.
  • High transferrin saturation (>45%) strongly suggests hemochromatosis.
  • Pregnancy raises transferrin, but ferritin remains most reliable for iron stores.
  • TIBC is simply transferrin × 25 when expressed in µmol/L.

Interesting Fact

Transferrin not only carries iron - it also plays roles in viral entry inhibition, immune function, and antioxidant defense, making it far more than just a transport protein.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Iron & Binding Proteins
  2. WHO Iron Deficiency Diagnosis Guidelines
  3. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Transferrin
  4. ARUP Consult - Iron Studies
  5. BSH Guidelines - Iron Deficiency & Anaemia
  6. NIH / MedlinePlus - Transferrin Test

Last updated: January 27, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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