Ineffective Erythropoiesis (Anemia of Chronic Disease)
Overview
Anemia of chronic disease (ACD), also called anemia of inflammation or anemia of chronic illness, is a type of ineffective erythropoiesis in which the bone marrowâs ability to produce healthy red blood cells (RBCs) is impaired by ongoing inflammation, infection, or malignancy. Unlike ironâdeficiency anemia, the body usually has adequate iron stores, but the iron is âlocked awayâ and unusable for hemoglobin synthesis.
Who it affects: ACD can occur at any age but is most common in adults over 50âŻyears old and in individuals with chronic conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, chronic kidney disease (CKD), inflammatory bowel disease, HIV, or solidâorgan cancers.
Prevalence: Approximately 5â10âŻ% of the U.S. adult population has some form of anemia, and ACD accounts for up to 30âŻ% of these cases, especially in hospitalized or longâterm care settings. Worldwide, ACD is the second most common cause of anemia after ironâdeficiency anemia (WHO, 2021).
Symptoms
Symptoms arise from reduced oxygen delivery to tissues and can range from mild to severe.
- Fatigue and weakness â the most universal complaint; patients often feel âtired after a short walk.â
- Pallor â noticeable in the skin, nail beds, and conjunctiva.
- Shortness of breath â especially on exertion; may be misattributed to the underlying disease.
- Dizziness or lightâheadedness â can lead to falls in older adults.
- Rapid or irregular heartbeat (tachycardia) â the heart works harder to pump oxygenârich blood.
- Cold hands and feet â peripheral vasoconstriction due to low oxygen.
- Headaches â result from mild cerebral hypoxia.
- Reduced exercise tolerance â patients may stop activities they previously enjoyed.
- Chest pain â rare, but possible in patients with preâexisting heart disease when anemia is severe.
- Impaired concentration or âbrain fogâ â cognitive slowing related to inadequate cerebral oxygenation.
Causes and Risk Factors
Primary Pathophysiologic Mechanisms
- Inflammatory cytokines (ILâ6, TNFâα, IFNâÎł) increase hepatic production of hepcidin, a hormone that blocks iron release from macrophages and intestinal absorption.
- Reduced erythropoietin (EPO) response â the kidneys produce less EPO in CKD, and inflammation blunts the marrowâs response to any EPO that is produced.
- Shortened RBC lifespan â cytokines promote macrophage-mediated clearance of erythrocytes.
- Boneâmarrow suppression â chronic disease can directly inhibit progenitor cell proliferation.
Common Underlying Conditions
- Chronic kidney disease (especially stageâŻ3â5)
- Rheumatoid arthritis and other autoimmune disorders
- Chronic infections (HIV, hepatitis B/C, tuberculosis)
- Solid tumors (lung, breast, colorectal) and hematologic malignancies
- Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohnâs, ulcerative colitis)
- Heart failure and chronic liver disease
Risk Factors
- AgeâŻ>âŻ50âŻyears
- Longâstanding inflammatory or infectious disease
- CKD with reduced glomerular filtration rate (GFRâŻ<âŻ60âŻmL/min/1.73âŻmÂČ)
- Use of immunosuppressive drugs (e.g., TNFâα inhibitors) that may mask classic inflammatory signs
- Malnutrition or vitamin B12/folate deficiency that can coexist and worsen anemia.
Diagnosis
Initial Laboratory Evaluation
| Test | Typical ACD Finding |
|---|---|
| Complete blood count (CBC) | Low hemoglobin (Hb) & hematocrit, mildâtoâmoderate normocytic, normochromic anemia (MCV 80â100âŻfL). |
| Serum iron | Decreased |
| Total ironâbinding capacity (TIBC) | Decreased |
| Ferritin | Normal or elevated (reflects stored iron) |
| Reticulocyte count | Low or inappropriately normal (underproduction) |
| Erythropoietin level | Inappropriately low for degree of anemia |
| CRP / ESR | Elevated, indicating underlying inflammation |
Additional Studies (when indicated)
- Boneâmarrow biopsy â rarely needed; may show reduced erythroid precursors.
- Renal function panel â serum creatinine, eGFR to assess CKDârelated anemia.
- Hepcidin assay â emerging test, not yet routine, useful in research settings.
- Iron studies for differential diagnosis â to rule out concurrent ironâdeficiency anemia.
Diagnostic Criteria (per WHO)
A diagnosis of ACD is made when:
- Hemoglobin is < 13âŻg/dL in men or < 12âŻg/dL in women,
- Serum ferritin â„ 100âŻng/mL (or â„ 30âŻng/mL when inflammation is present),
- Serum iron < 60âŻÂ”g/dL and TIBC < 250âŻÂ”g/dL, and
- There is a chronic inflammatory, infectious, or malignant condition that can explain the anemia.
Treatment Options
Address the Underlying Disease
The cornerstone of therapy is optimal control of the chronic condition that drives inflammation.
- DMARDs (diseaseâmodifying antirheumatic drugs) for rheumatoid arthritis.
- Antiretroviral therapy for HIV.
- Chemoâradiation or targeted therapy for cancers.
- ACE inhibitors or ARBs to slow CKD progression.
ErythropoiesisâStimulating Agents (ESAs)
- Agents: epoetin alfa, darbepoetin alfa.
- Indications: CKDârelated anemia (HbâŻ<âŻ10âŻg/dL), chemotherapyâinduced ACD, or symptomatic anemia refractory to disease control.
- Target Hb: 10â11.5âŻg/dL (higher targets linked to increased thromboembolic risk).
- Monitor for hypertension, thromboembolic events, and iron status.
Iron Supplementation
Even when ferritin is normal, functional iron deficiency may exist. Intravenous (IV) iron is preferred over oral because hepcidin blocks absorption. Common regimens include:
- Iron sucrose 200âŻmg IV weekly for 5âŻweeks, or
- Ferric carboxymaltose 1âŻg IV over 15âŻminutes (single dose).
IV iron should be given under supervision due to rare anaphylactic reactions.
Blood Transfusion
Reserved for lifeâthreatening anemia (HbâŻ<âŻ7âŻg/dL) or when rapid correction is essential (e.g., acute cardiac ischemia). Chronic transfusion carries risk of iron overload and alloimmunization, so it is not a longâterm solution.
Adjunctive Lifestyle Measures
- Balanced diet rich in protein, vitamin B12, folate, and vitamin C (enhances iron utilization).
- Regular moderateâintensity aerobic activity (e.g., walking 30âŻminutes most days) to improve cardiovascular efficiency.
- Smoking cessation â smoking worsens chronic inflammation and impairs oxygen transport.
Living with Ineffective Erythropoiesis (Anemia of Chronic Disease)
Daily Management Tips
- Track symptoms in a journalânote fatigue level, shortness of breath, and any new chest discomfort.
- Take medications exactly as prescribed, especially ESAs and IV iron infusions.
- Stay hydratedâdehydration can falsely elevate hemoglobin concentration.
- Schedule regular labs every 1â3âŻmonths (CBC, iron studies, creatinine) to monitor trends.
- Plan activity wiselyâpace yourself, incorporate rest breaks, and use a âtalk testâ to gauge exertion.
- Vaccinationsâkeep up with flu, pneumococcal, and hepatitis B vaccines to reduce infectionârelated inflammation.
- Psychological supportâliving with chronic disease can cause depression; consider counseling or support groups.
When to Contact Your Healthcare Provider
- Hb drops by >âŻ1âŻg/dL within a month without an obvious cause.
- New or worsening chest pain, palpitations, or syncope.
- Persistent shortness of breath at rest.
- Sideâeffects from ESA therapy (e.g., high blood pressure).
Prevention
Because ACD is secondary to another disease, prevention focuses on minimizing chronic inflammation and protecting organ function.
- Optimal management of rheumatologic, renal, or infectious diseases per current guidelines.
- Maintain a healthy weight and engage in regular physical activity to reduce systemic inflammation.
- Avoid excessive alcohol and smoking, both of which exacerbate inflammatory pathways.
- Screen for and treat iron deficiency early to prevent compounding anemia.
- Vaccinate against infections that could trigger chronic inflammatory states.
Complications
If untreated or poorly managed, ACD can lead to:
- Cardiovascular strain â chronic lowâgrade anemia forces the heart to work harder, increasing risk of leftâventricular hypertrophy, heart failure, and myocardial infarction.
- Reduced quality of life â persistent fatigue limits independence and may cause depression.
- Impaired wound healing â oxygen delivery is critical for tissue repair.
- Exacerbation of the underlying disease â anemia can worsen renal function, reduce immune competence, and limit tolerance to chemotherapy.
- Increased mortality â large registry studies link moderateâtoâsevere ACD with higher allâcause mortality in CKD and cancer patients (NIH, 2022).
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Sudden chest pain or pressure, especially with shortness of breath.
- Rapid, irregular heartbeat (palpitations) accompanied by dizziness or fainting.
- Severe shortness of breath at rest or inability to speak full sentences.
- Signs of stroke â facial droop, arm weakness, speech difficulty.
- Bleeding that leads to a rapid drop in hemoglobin (e.g., gastrointestinal bleeding).
Sources: Mayo Clinic; American Heart Association; CDC.
References:
1. Mayo Clinic. âAnemia of chronic disease.â https://www.mayoclinic.org (accessed JuneâŻ2026).
2. CDC. âAnemia.â https://www.cdc.gov (2024).
3. National Institutes of Health. âKidney Disease and Anemia.â https://www.niddk.nih.gov (2022).
4. WHO. âWorldwide prevalence of anemia 2021.â https://www.who.int.
5. Cleveland Clinic. âErythropoietin stimulating agents.â https://my.clevelandclinic.org (2023).
6. American Heart Association. âWhen to call emergency services for cardiac symptoms.â https://www.heart.org (2024).