In a one-year period (1976--1977), 161 residents of a long-term facility were evaluated. There were 44 men and 117 women. According to criteria established by the World Health Organization, 64 residents (40 percent) were anemic. The incidence was greater for women than for men. The peak incidence occurred in the 71--80 age group for women, and in the 90+ age group for men. Iron deficiency secondary to surgical procedures, gastrointestinal bleeding or anticoagulant therapy was the most common cause of correctable anemia. Of the 64 anemic patients, 42 percent responded to therapy. Anemia among the elderly in institutions is often reversible, unlike the anemia of chronic disease. Evaluation should include a careful history and physical examination plus readily available laboratory findings. Invasive procedures are rarely indicated.
Anemia is a hematologic abnormality commonly discussed during the treatment of childhood cancer, but its incidence has not been previously reported. As the basis for determining the incidence of anemia, this retrospective review of medical records combined databases containing the records of all patients 1 to 18 years of age with newly diagnosed neuroblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, Hodgkin disease, Ewing sarcoma, or osteosarcoma from two pediatric oncology centers. Data from 405 patients were included in the analysis of hemoglobin at the time of diagnosis. Across diagnoses, 51% to 74% of patients were anemic using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention age- and sex-specific values to define anemia. The long-term complications of anemia in children with cancer are unknown. Further investigation of the clinical significance of anemia, including its impact on quality of life, is warranted.
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