All Conditions/Metabolic/Iron Deficiency Anemia

Is Iron Deficiency Anemia Genetic?

Iron deficiency anemia occurs when the body does not have enough iron to produce adequate hemoglobin. Genetic variants can affect iron absorption, transport, and regulation.

Affects ~1 in 4 people globally.

Genetic Factors Behind Iron Deficiency Anemia

Research has identified multiple genetic variants that influence a person's susceptibility to Iron Deficiency Anemia. While no single gene determines whether someone will develop this condition, specific variants can increase or decrease risk. Key genes studied in relation to Iron Deficiency Anemia include:

TMPRSS6
HFE
TFR2
SLC11A2

Each of these genes plays a distinct role in the biological pathways related to Iron Deficiency Anemia. Variants in these genes have been identified through large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and replicated across multiple populations.

How GenomeInsight Analyzes Your Risk

GenomeInsight examines your raw DNA data from services like 23andMe, AncestryDNA, or whole-genome sequencing (VCF files) to identify genetic variants associated with Iron Deficiency Anemia. The analysis is performed entirely in your browser, meaning your genetic data never leaves your device.

For each relevant variant, GenomeInsight reports your genotype, the associated risk allele, the odds ratio from published research, and your overall risk profile compared to the general population. Results are presented with easy-to-understand risk visualizations and percentile rankings.

Genetic risk is only one piece of the puzzle. Lifestyle, diet, environment, and family history all contribute to overall risk. GenomeInsight's analysis is for informational and educational purposes and is not a medical diagnosis.

Understanding Your Iron Deficiency Anemia Results

After uploading your DNA file, you will receive a detailed health risk report covering 52 conditions, including Iron Deficiency Anemia. For each condition, GenomeInsight analyzes multiple SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) and calculates a combined risk assessment.

Your results will show whether you carry risk-increasing or protective alleles in genes like TMPRSS6, HFE, TFR2, and SLC11A2. Risk levels range from "Below Average" to "Significantly Increased," with population percentile comparisons to contextualize your results.

Explore Related Conditions

🔒

See how your genetics relate to Iron Deficiency Anemia - upload your data for a personalized analysis.

Your data never leaves your browser.

Discover Your Iron Deficiency Anemia Risk Profile

Upload your 23andMe, AncestryDNA, or VCF file for a free, privacy-first genetic analysis covering Iron Deficiency Anemia and 51 other health conditions.

Upload Your DNA Data