To evaluate storage iron deficiency and iron-deficient erythropoiesis we determined, in a cross-sectional study of 95 patients mainly including end-stage renal disease patients (ESRD) with (32) and without rh-EPO therapy (55), the following parameters: hemoglobin, mean corpuscular red cell volume, ferritin, transferrin saturation (TS), zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) and soluble transferrin receptor (TfR). In the dialysis group the percentage of positive samples with each marker of tissue iron supply defined as TS < 20%, ZPP > 40 mumol/mol Heme and TfR > 3.05 microgram/ml was as follows: TS 43.7% and 32.2% at a diagnostic threshold level of < 16%, ZPP 33.3% and TfR 17.2%. Manifest storage iron deficiency defined as ferritin < 30 ng/ml was observed in 5.7% of the samples while the mean ferritin concentration of the rh-Epo treated dialysis patients was 509.3 ng/ml compared to 262.5 ng/ml in the group without rh-EPO therapy. These data reflect a generous iron substitution in our series taking a TS < 20% as an intervention criterion. Looking at the different results of the three markers the best correspondence was found between ZPP and TfR resulting in a weak positive correlation (+0.64). In conclusion, we found quite different results with different assays when evaluating endogenous iron availability in our series of mainly ESRD patients in a cross-sectional study. Because a gold-standard is not defined further firm conclusions cannot be drawn from this type of study. The adequacy of the different parameters of iron metabolism including threshold levels and, consequently, the decision and route of iron substitution deserve an evaluation in a longitudinal study to characterize the best marker or marker combination in this setting.