Biomarker Testing – Iron & Oxygen Transport Panel

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Iron & Oxygen Transport Panel

Version 1.0 | As at: 25 Sep 2025

Biomarkers

Panels

This protocol assesses iron status, oxygen transport capacity, and readiness for endurance load, heat, or altitude exposure. It supports safe training progression and helps identify deficiencies before they impact performance.

  • Supports endurance, heat, and altitude readiness
  • Flags iron deficiency, anaemia risk, or inflammation masking
  • Guides nutrition, training load, and supplementation timing
  • Provides context for fatigue, recovery, and adaptation

🚨 Red‑Flag Results — Seek Medical Review: Ferritin <30 µg/L • Hb below athlete range • Transferrin Saturation <15% • Persistent high CRP • Unexplained high ferritin

⏱ When to Test

  • Morning draw (before 10 AM) — aligns with low hepcidin
  • Rested 24–48 h post-hard training or racing
  • Well hydrated, no acute illness
  • Include CRP to interpret ferritin accurately
  • Recommended scenarios: start-of-base, pre/post altitude, pre/post heat, quarterly check, post-sickness

🧬 Athlete Targets

Marker Standard Range Athlete Target Notes
Ferritin 30–300 µg/L >50 µg/L (endurance); 70–100 µg/L (heat/altitude) Low ferritin = reduced iron stores
Haemoglobin M: 130–180 g/L; F: 120–160 g/L M: 145–165 g/L; F: 130–150 g/L O₂ carrying capacity
Haematocrit M: 0.40–0.52; F: 0.36–0.46 M: 0.44–0.48; F: 0.38–0.45 Supports Hb interpretation
Transferrin Saturation 15–45% >20%; avoid <15% Iron availability
sTfR 0.8–2.0 mg/L Lower half of range Iron demand marker
Hepcidin Varies Low in AM Iron absorption regulator
CRP <5.0 mg/L <1.0 mg/L Inflammation context

🧭 Decision Protocol

  1. Check CRP: If >3.0 mg/L → defer ferritin interpretation unless urgent.
  2. Storage & Demand: Low ferritin = low stores; High sTfR = increased demand.
  3. Transport Pattern: Transferrin ↑ + TIBC ↑ + Sat <20% → likely deficiency.
  4. Classify:
    • Absolute deficiency: Low ferritin, low Sat, high sTfR
    • Functional deficiency: Normal ferritin, high sTfR, low Sat
    • Inflammation-masked: Normal/high ferritin, high CRP, low Sat

🧍 Athlete Self‑Check

  • Persistent fatigue not explained by training load
  • Shortness of breath or dizziness
  • Unusual mood changes or irritability
  • Slow recovery after normal sessions

If these symptoms persist alongside abnormal labs → escalate to medical review.

🗒 Coach Notes

  • Always interpret iron results in the context of training load, recovery, and recent illness — don’t isolate the numbers.
  • Flag any athlete with ferritin <50 µg/L or Hb trending downwards for medical review, even if performance hasn’t dropped yet.
  • Look for patterns: repeated low iron after altitude or heat blocks may signal inadequate recovery or nutrition support.
  • Encourage athletes to log subjective fatigue, mood, and sleep alongside lab results — this builds a transparent picture of health.
  • Never prescribe supplements yourself; your role is to highlight concerns and coordinate with medical staff.

Reminder: Your role is to protect athlete health first. Performance adjustments come only after medical clearance.

🛠 Role-Based Actions

Role Actions
🧑‍🎓 Rider • Increase dietary iron (heme + non-heme + vitamin C)
• Time iron intake when hepcidin is low (AM, away from training)
• Monitor fatigue, mood, recovery
• Avoid iron supplements unless advised
🧑‍🏫 Coach • Adjust training load if symptoms present
• Flag low ferritin or Hb for follow-up
• Monitor performance drop, recovery lag, mood changes
• Coordinate re-test in 6–8 weeks
🧑‍⚕️ Doctor / Nutritionist • Confirm deficiency type (absolute, functional, masked)
• Prescribe iron supplements if needed
• Investigate persistent high ferritin or low Hb
• Address inflammation or absorption blockers

🔁 Feedback Loop

  • Re-test 6–8 weeks after intervention
  • Escalate if:
    • No improvement
    • Hb drops
    • Unexplained high ferritin
    • Persistent low Sat or high sTfR
    • Symptoms persist despite dietary changes

Tip: Record test date and planned re-test date here for accountability.

📚 Source Note

Ranges and decision logic adapted from WHO guidelines, IOC consensus statements, and peer‑reviewed sports medicine literature. This protocol is designed for transparency and athlete safety — always escalate red‑flag results to a qualified medical professional.

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