Last updated:
March 25, 2026
Sideroblastic anaemia is caused by the defective incorporation of iron into protoporphyrin – the final step in the synthesis of heme. It is an umbrella term, referring to multiple disorders with different etiologies.
- Causes
- Inherited causes
- Delta-ALA-synthase gene defect (X-linked)
- Acquired causes
- Vitamin B6 deficiency
- Excess alcohol intake
- Copper deficiency
- Heavy metal toxicity: lead, copper, and zinc
- Lead inhibits ALA dehydratase and ferrochelatase
- Drugs: isoniazid and chloramphenicol
- Inherited causes
- Patient History
- Signs and symptoms
- Investigations
- Complete Blood Count
- Low Hb since iron is not able to bind to protoporphyrin
- Peripheral Blood Film
- Basophilic stippling of RBCs (the “stipples” are iron granules)
- Normocytes or macrocytes (more common in acquired etiologies)
- Serum iron studies
- High ferritin (to bind the intracellular iron that cannot bind protoporphyrin)
- High iron (Iron is backed up – the only anaemia with elevated iron levels)
- High transferrin saturation
- Normal or low TIBC (transferrin is not affected by this disease)
- Bone marrow aspirate with Prussian blue staining
- Ringed sideroblasts
- Complete Blood Count
- Treatment
- Treat the underlying cause
- Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) supplementation
- Pyridoxine is a cofactor for delta-ALA synthase. It accelerates haemoglobin synthesis.
- Dimercaprol, EDTA, or succimer (paediatric) for lead poisoning
- Transfusion if symptomatic
Some chelators
| Element | Chelator |
|---|---|
| Iron | Deferoxamine, Deferasirox |
| Mercury | Dimercaprol |
| Lead | Succimer, Dimercaprol, EDTA |
| Copper | Penicillamine |
| Zinc | EDTA |
