Vitamin and Iron Panel
Iron status and Vitamin D to support nutritional awareness.
5–7 working days
Every result includes a professional assessment from a BIG-registered doctor. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
Transferrin saturation is a key iron status marker that becomes increasingly important with age. Monitoring helps prevent both iron deficiency, which can contribute to fatigue and cognitive changes, and iron overload, which can be associated with organ damage over time.
This test calculates the percentage of transferrin protein that is carrying iron, derived from serum iron and total iron-binding capacity. It provides a more complete picture of iron status than either measurement alone.
Transferrin saturation is one of the most informative markers for assessing iron balance. It can help identify iron deficiency before anemia develops and is also valuable for detecting iron overload conditions such as hemochromatosis.
Testing may be recommended when iron deficiency or iron overload is suspected, as part of anemia investigation, during monitoring of iron supplementation, or as a screening tool for hereditary hemochromatosis.
Low transferrin saturation indicates iron deficiency. Consider iron supplementation.
High transferrin saturation may indicate haemochromatosis. Consider genetic testing.
Low transferrin saturation indicates iron deficiency. Consider iron supplementation.
High transferrin saturation may indicate haemochromatosis. Consider genetic testing.
For low iron status, include iron-rich foods such as lean red meat, poultry, fish, beans, and dark leafy greens. Vitamin C enhances iron absorption. For high iron status, follow your healthcare provider's guidance regarding dietary modifications and monitoring.
This marker is included in the following test panels.
Iron status and Vitamin D to support nutritional awareness.
5–7 working days
CBC, iron studies, Vitamin B12, and Vitamin D in one comprehensive panel.
5–7 working days