Copyright
©2009 The WJG Press and Baishideng.
World J Gastroenterol. Oct 7, 2009; 15(37): 4627-4637
Published online Oct 7, 2009. doi: 10.3748/wjg.15.4627
Published online Oct 7, 2009. doi: 10.3748/wjg.15.4627
Table 1 Etiopathogenic classification of anemia
Regenerative anemia |
Acute or chronic bleeding |
Hemolytic anemia |
Hereditary (hemoglobinopathy, enzymopathy, membrane-cytoskeletal defects) |
Acquired (autoimmune, mechanical destruction, toxic-metabolic, drugs, infectious, PNH, hypersplenism) |
Hypo-regenerative anemia |
Bone marrow failure caused by stem cell pathology |
Quantitative disorder |
Selective: erythroblastopenia (pure red cell aplasia) |
Global: aplastic anemia |
Qualitative disorder (dysmyelopoiesis) |
Inherited: hereditary dyserythropoiesis |
Acquired: myelodysplasia |
Bone marrow infiltration |
Leukemia, lymphoma, multiple myeloma |
Solid tumors |
Myelofibrosis |
Thesaurismosis (Gaucher disease) |
Inflammatory chronic diseases, microorganisms (Histoplasma, HIV) |
Drugs, hypothyroidism, uremia |
Erythropoietic factors deficiency |
Iron |
IDA |
ACD |
Cobalamin and folate |
Megaloblastic anemia |
Hormones: erythropoietin, thyroid hormones, androgens, steroids |
Table 2 Morphological classification
Microcytic anemia (MCV < 82 fL) |
IDA |
Thalassemia |
Non thalassemic conditions associated with microcytosis |
ACD (e.g. rheumatoid arthritis, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, chronic infection, neoplasia) |
Sideroblastic anemia (e.g. hereditary, lead poisoning) |
Normocytic anemia (MCV = 82-98 fL) |
Nutritional anemia (iron deficiency, cobalamin y/o folate) |
Anemia of renal insufficiency |
Hemolytic anemia |
Red cell intrinsic causes: membranopathy, enzymopathy, hemoglobinopathy |
Red cell extrinsic causes: immune-mediated, microangiopathic, associated with infection, chemical agent (spider venoms), metabolic |
ACD |
Primary bone marrow disorder |
Causes that are intrinsic to hematopoietic stem cells: bone marrow aplasia (idiopathic, PNH, Fanconi syndrome), pure red cell aplasia (acquired, congenital, Diamond-Blackfan syndrome), myelodysplastic syndrome |
Extrinsic causes: drugs, toxins, radiation, viruses, immune-mediated, bone marrow infiltration (metastatic and lymphoma) |
Macrocytic anemia (MCV > 98 fL) |
Drugs (hydroxyurea, zidovudine, methotrexate) |
Nutritional (vitamin B12 and folate deficiency) |
Drug-induced hemolytic anemia |
Dyserythropoiesis, myelodysplastic syndrome, clonal hematologic disorder |
Hereditary hematologic disorders |
Mild macrocytosis (MCV = 100-110 fL) |
Reticulocytes |
Excess alcohol intake, liver disease, smoking |
Hypothyroidism, Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia |
Copper deficiency, bone marrow aplasia, erythroblastopenic anemia |
Down syndrome |
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease |
Table 3 Classification of anemia as RDW and MCV
↓MCV | Normal MCV | ↑MCV | |
Normal RDW | β-thalassemia | Normocytic | Bone marrow aplasia |
α-thalassemia | |||
Increased RDW | Iron deficiency | Inflammatory anemia Hypothyroidism | Megaloblastic anemia |
Table 4 Serum levels that differentiate ACD, IDA and mixed anemia
ACD | IDA | Mixed anemia | |
Iron | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ |
Transferrin | ↓ or N | ↑ | ↓ |
Transferrin saturation | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ |
Ferritin | N or ↑ | ↓ | ↓ or N |
Serum transferrin receptor | N | ↑ | N or ↑ |
Ratio: soluble receptor of transferrin/log ferritin | < 1 | > 2 | > 2 |
Cytokine levels | ↑ | N | ↑ |
Table 5 Causes of megaloblastic anemia
Cobalamin deficiency |
Poor diet |
Deficiency of intrinsic factor |
Pernicious anemia |
Total or partial Gastrectomy |
Ingestion of caustic (lye) |
Functional defect of intrinsic factor |
Alteration of ileal (microenvironment) |
Insufficient pancreatic protease activity |
Inactivation enzyme (Sd. Zollinger-Ellison) |
Competition for cobalamin |
Alteration of ileal mucosa |
Acquired |
Surgical resection or by-pass |
Regional enteritis (Crohn’s disease) |
Tropical esprue |
Celiac disease, Tuberculosis |
Lymphomatous infiltration |
Induced by drugs |
Congenital |
Sd Immerslund-Gräsbeck |
Congenital transcobalamin II deficiency or abnormality |
Congenital methylmalonic acidemia and aciduria |
Hemodialysis |
Urinary losses (congestive heart failure) |
Folate deficiency |
Dietary |
Old age, infancy, poverty, alcoholism, chronic invalids, psychiatrically disturbed, scurvy and kwashiorkor |
Excess utilization or loss |
Physiologic: pregnancy and lactation, prematurity |
Pathologic: Hematologic diseases |
Malignant diseases |
Inflammatory disease |
Metabolic disease |
Excess urinary loss, congestive heart failure, active liver disease |
Hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis |
Malabsorption |
Congenital |
Anti-folate drugs |
Alcoholism |
Tropical sprue, gluten-induced enteropathy |
Extensive jejune resection, Crohn’s disease, partial gastrectomy, systemic bacterial infection, Whipple’s disease |
Congenital abnormalities of folate metabolism |
Cyclohydrolase, methionine synthetase |
Combined deficit of folate and cobalamin |
Celiac disease |
Regional enteritis (Crohn’s disease) |
Congenital disorder of DNA synthesis |
Disorders of DNA synthesis induced by drugs |
Anti-folate |
Purine antagonists |
Pyrimidine antagonists |
Alkylating |
Eritroleucemia |
Table 6 Differential diagnosis of anemia from a gastrointestinal point of view
Gastrointestinal causes of anemia |
Microcytic anemia |
Iron deficiency |
Decreased iron absorption |
Frequent: Celiac disease, gastrectomy, H pylori colonization |
Infrequent: Bowel resection, bacterial overgrowth |
Occult gastrointestinal blood loss |
Frequent: aspirin and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use, colonic carcinoma, gastric ulceration, angiodysplasia, inflammatory bowel diseases |
Infrequent: esophagitis, esophageal carcinoma, gastric antral vascular carcinoma, small bowel tumors, ampullary carcinoma, Ancylomasta duodenale |
Non-gastrointestinal blood loss |
Frequent: menstruation, blood donation, ACD |
Infrequent: Hematuria, epistaxis |
Sideroblastic anemia (alcohol, lead, drugs), vitamin B6 |
ACD |
Normocytic anemia |
Frequent: ACD (liver disease, renal insufficiency, malignancy, nutritional deficiency, drug effects, alcoholism, recent trauma or surgery, iron deficiency |
Infrequent: primary bone marrow disorder |
Macrocytic anemia |
Non-megaloblastic |
Systemic disease: |
Frequent: liver disease, alcoholism |
Infrequent: primary bone marrow disease (myelodysplastic syndrome, aplastic anemia), metastatic infiltration, hemolytic anemia, hypothyroidism |
Megaloblastic anemia |
Vitamin B12 deficiency: pernicious anemia, gastrectomy, hereditary deficiency of intrinsic factor, inflammatory bowel disease, primary intestinal malabsorptive disorders, parasitic colonization, nutritional deficiencies |
Folate deficiency: diet poor in folates, regional enteritis, Whipple’s disease, scleroderma, amyloidosis, increase requirements (liver disease, hemolytic anemia) |
Antifolate drugs: methotrexate |
- Citation: Moreno Chulilla JA, Romero Colás MS, Gutiérrez Martín M. Classification of anemia for gastroenterologists. World J Gastroenterol 2009; 15(37): 4627-4637
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v15/i37/4627.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.15.4627