What is Transferrin Saturation?
Transferrin saturation is calculated from serum iron and transferrin and provides a functional view of iron availability for transport. Low saturation often fits with iron deficiency, while very high saturation can fit with iron excess. It is therefore interpreted together with ferritin and the blood count.
Why is Transferrin Saturation relevant?
Transferrin saturation indicates what share of your transferrin is actually carrying iron. A low saturation typically signals too little iron in circulation; a very high saturation can suggest iron loading. The marker is therefore a functional companion to ferritin: ferritin says something about the storage, saturation says something about what is moving right now.
How to read Transferrin Saturation in context
Always read transferrin saturation alongside ferritin, serum iron, and transferrin. Timing matters — saturation swings throughout the day — so for a reliable measurement the blood is ideally drawn in the morning while fasting. An isolated mildly abnormal value rarely warrants action on its own; repetition and context determine whether there is something to follow.