Macrocytosis (Guidelines)
Audience
- Highland HSCP
The normal MCV depends on age but is generally 83 to 101 fL. This can be present with or without anaemia.
Causes
- Artifact e.g. delay to analysis
- Alcohol and liver disease
- Medications especially hydroxycarbamide, methoxtrexate, chemotherapy and other immunomodulatory drugs
- Thyroid dysfunction
- Vitamin B12 or folate deficiency
- Haemolysis (due to reticulocytosis)
- Paraprotein
- Pregnancy
- Myelodysplasia and aplastic anaemia – often associated with neutropenia and/or thrombocytopenia
History and examination
Suggest looking at the above causes and look for signs of liver disease. Review older blood test results. Ask about diet and malabsorption.
Suggested investigations
- Liver function tests
- Vitamin B12 and folate
- Blood film
- Haemolysis screen (reticulocytes, blood film, DAT, LDH, haptoglobin)
- Pregnancy test
- Immunoglobulins and serum protein electrophoresis
- TSH
Management
- Correct any secondary cause and consider repeating test in first instance
- If haemolysis is suspected then please discuss or refer
- If myelodysplasia is suspected (other cytopenias or blood film abnormalities) then please discuss or refer
- Please consider referral for macrocytic anaemia when the haemoglobin is persistently less than 110 g/L in men or less than 100g/L in women and there are no secondary causes. For cases when the haemoglobin is still greater than 100g/L a discussion via Clinical Dialogue may appropriate especially if the patient is asymptomatic.
- If the MCV is high with no anaemia or other cytopenia and no cause is identified then these patients can be monitored in primary care every six to 12 months
- If patient has liver disease please discuss with the G.I./ hepatology tea
- If a paraprotein is detected then please see separate guideline on this finding