Raised Ferritin
Raised ferritin is very common and often incidental.
Most cases are due to:
- inflammation
- infection
- liver disease
- metabolic syndrome
Not iron overload.
Your job is to:
✅ decide if this is inflammation or iron overload
✅ identify who needs further tests
✅ avoid unnecessary referrals
Not send everyone for genetic testing.
✅ First principle (most important)
Always remember:
Ferritin is an acute phase reactant first, iron marker second.
So:
High ferritin ≠ haemochromatosis
Think inflammation first.
✅ Step 1 – Check the clinical context first
Before ordering tests, ask:
- Is the patient unwell?
- Infection?
- Inflammatory disease?
- Liver disease?
- Obesity/diabetes?
- Alcohol use?
Most answers are here.
✅ Step 2 – Look at the ferritin level (rough guide)
The level helps you judge risk.
🟢 Mild elevation (<500)
Very common
Usually:
- MASLD
- alcohol
- infection
- inflammation
- obesity
Often needs:
👉 no urgent action
🟡 Moderate (500–1000)
Still usually:
- liver disease
- metabolic syndrome
- alcohol
- chronic inflammation
Consider:
👉 further workup but not urgent
🔴 Very high (>1000)
Red flag
Think:
- significant liver disease
- haemochromatosis
- malignancy
- severe inflammation
- HLH (rare)
👉 needs proper assessment
✅ Step 3 – Check transferrin saturation (key step)
This is the most important test.
Order:
👉 Iron studies + transferrin saturation
Because:
High ferritin + normal transferrin sat
→ inflammation/metabolic/liver cause likely
High ferritin + high transferrin sat (>45–50%)
→ iron overload → think haemochromatosis
This test separates the two pathways.
✅ Step 4 – Decide the likely pattern
🟢 Pattern 1 – Inflammatory / metabolic (most common)
Findings:
- Ferritin raised
- Transferrin saturation normal
- CRP raised ±
- Often abnormal LFTs
Think:
- MASLD
- alcohol
- infection
- chronic disease
- malignancy
What to do:
Treat underlying cause
No urgent haemochromatosis testing
This is 80–90% of cases.
🟡 Pattern 2 – Liver disease
Findings:
- Ferritin raised
- ALT/ALP abnormal
- Alcohol or metabolic risk
Think:
Ferritin leaking from injured hepatocytes
What to do:
Manage liver disease
Not automatically iron overload
Common junior mistake: confusing liver disease with haemochromatosis.
🔴 Pattern 3 – Iron overload (less common but important)
Findings:
- Ferritin raised
- Transferrin saturation >45–50%
Think:
Haemochromatosis
What to do:
- HFE genetic testing
- refer hepatology/haematology
Because:
Untreated → cirrhosis, diabetes, cardiomyopathy
This group you must not miss.
✅ Step 5 – Special situations to remember
Infection/sepsis
Ferritin can be very high
Not iron overload
MASLD/obesity/diabetes
Very common cause of mild–moderate elevation
Alcohol excess
Common cause of high ferritin + abnormal LFTs
Malignancy/inflammation
Ferritin rises as acute phase reactant
Extremely high ferritin (>5000–10000)
Rare
Think:
- HLH
- severe inflammation
- malignancy
Escalate
✅ Practical ward scenarios
Scenario 1
Ferritin 650, ALT mildly raised, diabetic
→ MASLD likely
→ manage metabolic risk
Scenario 2
Ferritin 400, pneumonia, CRP high
→ inflammatory
→ repeat after recovery
Scenario 3
Ferritin 900, transferrin sat 60%
→ iron overload
→ haemochromatosis workup
Scenario 4
Ferritin 1200, heavy alcohol use
→ alcohol-related liver disease likely
✅ When to refer
Refer if:
- transferrin saturation high
- ferritin persistently >1000
- unclear diagnosis
- abnormal LFTs with concern
- suspected haemochromatosis
Don’t refer every mild elevation.
❌ Common junior mistakes
- Assuming all high ferritin = haemochromatosis
- Not checking transferrin saturation
- Ignoring liver disease
- Over-investigating mild elevations
- Forgetting inflammation/infection causes
Remember:
Iron overload is much less common than metabolic/inflammatory causes.
✅ Simple ward algorithm
When ferritin is raised:
- Check patient context
- Check transferrin saturation
- Normal sat → inflammation/liver/metabolic
- High sat → iron overload workup
- Escalate if very high or unclear
Simple and safe.
✅ Take-home concept
Most raised ferritin is inflammation or liver disease, not iron overload.
Transferrin saturation is the key test that changes management.
If you remember that, you’ll avoid most mistakes.
