Abstract

The aim of this work was to estimate the prevalence of iron deficiency in patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer (CRC) and to clarify its association with patient- and tumour-related characteristics. This was a single-centre registry-based cohort study. Iron status was routinely evaluated upon diagnosis of CRC, and these data were coupled with patient- and tumour-specific data from the Danish CRC Group Registry (2013-2018). Data were analysed using multivariate logistic regression. Out of 846 patients, 543 (64%) were iron deficient. There was an association between increasing depth of invasion and iron deficiency, with odds ratios (ORs) of iron deficiency being 2.8 (p=0.001, CI 1.5-5.1), 4.22 (p<0.001, CI 2.48-7.18) and 4.63 (p<0.001, CI 2.30-9.34) for T-stages 2, 3 and 4, respectively. Right-sided tumours had an OR of 3.54 (p<0.001, CI 2.22-5.67) of iron deficiency compared with left-sided tumours. Tumours diagnosed through the national CRC screening programme were less likely to be associated with iron deficiency (OR 0.34, CI 0.22-0.52), while female gender was associated with an increase in the odds for iron deficiency (OR 1.91, CI 1.33-2.76). Iron deficiency was prevalent in 88% of anaemic patients and 43% of nonanaemic patients. Iron deficiency was highly prevalent in patients diagnosed with CRC. Increased depth of tumour invasion, right-sided location and female gender were all associated with higher odds for iron deficiency, while patients diagnosed through the national screening programme were associated with lower odds for iron deficiency. A large proportion of patients with a normal haemoglobin were also iron deficient.

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