Anaemia (weak blood) in pregnancy

 

Small drop in haemoglobin (Hb) level is usual in pregnancy. Hb should be

  • 110g/L or more in women up to 20 weeks pregnant
  • 105g/L or more after 20 weeks

Risk factors for low iron stores at start of pregnancy

  • Diet low in 'absorbable iron' — significant problem in remote communities
  • Grand multiparity (already given birth 3 or more times)
  • Adolescent (teenage) pregnancy — iron also needed for mother's own development
  • Twin or multiple pregnancy
  • Chronic conditions or infections — diabetes, kidney disease, tuberculosis
  • Recent history of bleeding
  • Previous anaemia
  • Less than a year between pregnancies 

Problems for pregnant woman

  • Tiredness
  • Increased risk of infection during pregnancy, postpartum haemorrhage, severe anaemia after birth due to poor iron reserve
  • Very severe anaemia can cause heart failure

Problems for baby

  • Low iron stores cause anaemia
  • Low birth weight, preterm birth, perinatal mortality
  • Long-term effects on child's development

Ask

  • Periods before pregnancy — long or heavy
  • Iron in diet
  • About risk factors 

Check

  • Routine antenatal care includes
  • A fall in MCV is the earliest sign of iron deficiency

Other causes of anaemia

  • If no known iron deficiency anaemia BUT Hb less than 110g/L up to 20 weeks pregnant or less than 105g/L after 20 weeks — consider other causes
    • Take blood for CRP, serum B12, folate, TFT, LFT, UEC

Do

  • If POC Test Hb less than 80g/L ​— ​urgent medical consult 
  • If POC Test Hb less than 110g/L up to 20 weeks pregnant or less than 105g/L after 20 weeks ​— treat as iron deficiency anaemia, start iron replacement
  • Medical consult if
    • Unclear if iron deficiency or other cause of anaemia
    • Hb does not increase as expected (8–10g/L each week) over first 2 weeks of iron replacement
    • Hb still less than 100g/L after 4 weeks of oral iron

Flowchart 2.3   Management of iron deficiency

Do — iron deficiency anaemia

  • Talk about access to healthy food — refer to dietitian
    • Getting enough iron and folic acid — red meat, fish, eggs, whole grain breads and fortified cereals
    • Include fruits and vegetables with meals
    • Avoid drinking tea with meals
  • Give vitamin C oral — 500mg once a day to improve absorption of dietary iron
  • Give iron replacement
    • Take blood for FBC 2 weeks after starting treatment and again 2 weeks after that — should see 8–10g/L increase in Hb each week
  • If from an area where hookworm is/has been common OR if MCV low and eosinophil count raised — give pyrantel oral — adult 1g once a day for 3 days
    • Do not give ivermectin or albendazole in pregnancy

Iron replacement

Do not give iron supplement if Hb and iron studies normal

Oral iron

  • Iron–folic acid oral — 1 tablet (more than 60mg elemental iron) once a day
    • If woman has side effects — give lower dose
    • Iron dose in pregnancy multivitamins may be lower than recommended
    • Take iron tablets with water or orange juice — not milk
    • Best taken on an empty stomach — 1 hour before meal or 3 hours after meals
    • If upset stomach a problem — take with food or at night
  • To encourage woman to take iron–folic acid tablets regularly, explain
    • Why tablets are important
    • Normal that faeces can become dark in colour
  • Encourage woman to tell you if she has side effects
    • Oral iron alone (without folic acid) can make discomforts of pregnancy worse — eg constipation, heart burn, nausea indigestion and diarrhoea
  • Tell woman to keep iron medicine away from children — risk of toxicity
  • Continue until 6–8 week postnatal check, reassess

Iron IV infusion

  • Do not use
    • In first trimester — dates must be checked with dating scan before giving
    • If signs of infection
  • Use if insufficient time for oral supplements before expected birth date — medical consult
    • Consider for women who have a Hb less than 105g/L in second and third trimester as oral supplements unlikely bring it up to normal before birth
  • Can be used if oral iron doesn’t work or can’t be used — medical consult
  • Ferric (iron) carboxymaltose (eg Ferinject) IV infusion can be given in second and third trimester if
    • Prescribed by doctor, in consult with obstetrician in second trimester
    • Anaphylaxis kit and resuscitation equipment available
  • Discuss risk of IV iron — injection site reaction and paravenous (surrounding tissue of vein) leakage causing skin staining
  • Can safely be administered by
    • Slow IV bolus injection
    • IV infusion using a gravity feed giving set
    • IV infusion using an IV infusion pump (preferred)
  • Do not restart oral iron until at least 5 days after infusion given
  • Do not give more than 20mL (1,000mg) in a single dose. Give second dose at least 1 week after first

Table 2.9   Cumulative Iron Dose Calculation by weight and Hb level for Ferric Carboxymaltose (eg Ferinject)

Do — Hb normal but iron studies show ferritin less than 30microgram/L

  • Give oral iron replacement as above
  • Check iron studies and Hb after 4 weeks

Do — megaloblastic (folate deficiency)  anaemia

Anaemic with high MCV and low red blood cell folate

  • Medical consult — before starting treatment
  • Give iron-folic acid oral — 1 tablet (up to 100mg elemental iron) once a day

AND folic acid oral — 5mg once a day

  • Take blood for FBC at 2 weeks then 4 weeks after starting treatment 

Do — anaemia from other causes

  • Anaemia due to vitamin B12 deficiency — can have serious short-term and long-term neurological consequences for baby
    • Medical consult — doctor may advise vitamin B12 supplement, usually IM
    • Talk with woman about foods rich in vitamin B12 — fortified cereals, seafood, liver, meat, cheese, eggs
  • If anaemia due to parasitic disease, genetic causes, kidney disease, any other cause — medical consult

Follow-up

  • Check FBC and iron studies results 4 weeks postnatal to ensure iron status has corrected
  • Ensure babies born to anaemic mothers also have appropriate follow-up with provision of preventative oral iron supplementation — see Anaemia (weak blood) in children and youth