HEMATOLOGY, ASH, AND THE ANEMIA OF THE AGED
Stanley L. Schrier
Blood, 15 November 2005, Vol. 106, No. 10, pp.
3341-3342.
Last year when I served as ASH president, during the
society's regular meetings with several institutes of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), we learned that the National Institute on Aging
(NIA) had just completed the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES III), which was subsequently published in Blood. The study focused
on community-dwelling subjects and had elements of a wake-up call for primary
care physicians, geriatricians, and hematologists, because it showed that 10
percent of men and women older than 65 years of age were anemic. Perhaps more
important, although only a very small number of these subjects had hemoglobin
(Hgb) levels lower than 11 g/dL, prior studies had shown that such "trivial"
levels of anemia resulted in decline in objective measures of physical
performance, higher 30-day
mortality rates for patients with acute myocardial infarction, and poorer
outcomes in patients with heart failure. These clinically
important revelations led ASH to cosponsor a research-agenda-setting conference
for NIA, attended by about 20 hematologists and geriatricians, in March 2004.
The conference considered some of the issues raised by NHANES III and suggested
areas for further investigation.
The conference found that the definition of anemia is an
unresolved problem. The World Health Organization (WHO) and NHANES III used the
same criteria for anemia: Hgb values lower than 13 g/dL for men and 12 g/dL for
women. It is understandable that in androgen-secreting, childbearing years women
might normally have lower Hgb values than men, but it is not clear that this
should continue to be the case after age 65. If the same Hgb value of less than
13 g/dL were used for women, 30 percent would be considered anemic, presumably
with the consequences in morbidity noted previously. Ethnic differences also
need to be considered, because by WHO criteria almost 30 percent of
African-American men and women have anemia, and the difference cannot be
explained by an increased prevalence of iron deficiency or alpha
thalassemia.
NHANES III was not designed to do a classical hematologic
differential diagnosis of the underlying cause of the anemia, but most cases
appeared to be production defects, with the leading causes being iron
deficiency, anemia of chronic inflammation (ACI), and "nutritional
deficiencies." ASH's conference noted the difficulty in diagnosing iron
deficiency, particularly in the setting of inflammatory disease.
The problem is complicated further because the geriatricians
informed the surprised hematologists that there was evidence for cytokine
dysregulation in the elderly. The distinction is
critical because, in a study of 100 consecutive patients with confirmed iron
deficiency, of those who underwent endoscopy 16% had colon cancer or
premalignant polyps. The conference
also noted the difficulty in diagnosing ACI/ACD (anemia of chronic disease) and
wondered if new information regarding the central role of hepcidin in
inflammation may improve our diagnostic ability in future.
Many elderly subjects had borderline serum values of vitamin
B12, but the conference noted that there were technical problems with the
assay and that the number of patients who actually had a Hgb response to vitamin
B12 therapy was very low.8 The
issue of marginal vitamin B12 levels and neuropathy was not considered in
detail.
In the NHANES III study, about one-third of the patients with
anemia were undiagnosed, leading to the hypothesis that there might be a new
entity: "anemia of the aged." Before the existence of such an entity can be
proven, all other forms of anemia have to be excluded. The difficulties in
diagnosing iron deficiency anemia and ACI are noted above. Furthermore,
myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is increasingly prevalent in the elderly and is a
recognized cause of anemia and other cytopenias. The conference noted that there
was no simple, inexpensive, definitive test for MDS and debated the value of the
peripheral smear as a screening method. There is increasing recognition of the
importance of diagnosing MDS, in part because there are now effective forms of
treatment including erythropoietic agents, 5-azacytidine, and lenalidomide
(Revlimid, Celgene, Summit, NJ).
The conference focused on the cause of the morbidity of even
"mild" anemia: was it the anemia per se, its underlying etiology, the associated
comorbidities and polypharmacy, or all of the above? This is clearly an area
ready for clinical research, where the anemia alone could be improved (to what
level?) by either red blood cell (RBC) transfusion or administration of agents
that enhance erythropoeisis.
As this was an agenda-setting conference, recommendations were
made regarding future research initiatives, which could include: definitions of
severe and mild anemia; a physiologic measurement of anemia; direct measurements
of RBC mass and plasma volume to more accurately ascertain the extent of the
anemia; assessment of marrow stem cell and erythropoietic reserve in the
elderly; more accurate measures of renal, thyroid, and androgen functions; and
development of screening tests for ACI, iron deficiency, and MDS.
Finally, there were thoughts about what could constitute an
appropriate work-up for an elderly patient with anemia, and when to refer the
patient to a hematologist. Certainly, given the potentially large number of
subjects involved, there are serious cost-benefit issues.
Given the obvious clinical importance of the anemia of aging
for patients and hematologists, the ASH Practice Committee's Subcommittee on
Quality of Care is sponsoring a special symposium at the 2005 ASH Annual Meeting
on this subject, in order to explore the issues and problems noted. The
symposium "Anemia and the Elderly: A Public Health Crisis in Hematology?" will
take place on Saturday, December 10, 2005, from 2:00 pm to 3:45 pm, in the
Georgia World Congress Center, Room B206. This symposium will be supported in
part by a generous grant from the Association of Subspecialty Professors, the
John A. Hartford Foundation, and the Merck Institute of Aging and Health.
References
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