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1.
Assessment of Serum Folic Acid and Homocysteine in Thalassemia Major Patients Before and After Folic Acid Supplement Cessation.
Baghersalimi, A, Hemmati Kolachahi, H, Darbandi, B, Kamran Mavardiani, Z, Alizadeh Alinodehi, M, Dalili, S, Hassanzadeh Rad, A
Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology. 2018;(7):504-507
Abstract
BACKGROUND Thalassemic patients have ineffective erythropoiesis. In recent treatment protocols, there are little data on folic acid supplementation for patients with thalassemia because it is supposed that regular blood transfusions prevent bone marrow hyperfunctioning. OBJECTIVE Investigators aimed to assess serum folic acid and homocysteine (Hcy) in thalassemia major patients before and after folic acid supplement cessation. PATIENTS AND METHODS This study was a before-after controlled clinical trial conducted in 17th Shahrivar Hospital, Rasht, North of Iran, during May to October 2016. The patients enrolled in this study had thalassemia major on regular blood transfusion and older than 2 years of age. They had at least a 6-month history of folic acid supplement consumption before enrollment in the study (1 mg/daily). Complete blood count, serum folic acid, and serum Hcy were measured before discontinuation of folic acid supplement. Then, patients did not receive folic acid for a month and after 1 month of folic acid cessation, the measurements were repeated. All data were entered in SPSS version 20.0 and analyzed. RESULTS Among the 40 patients in this study, 25 (62.5%) were female. The mean age of the participants was 21.39±11.17 years old. The mean of body mass index was 21.38±3.32 kg/m. Most of the participants had used folic acid supplement >5 years (29, 72.5%). The serum Hcy level was significantly increased (5.24±2.35 vs. 5.93±2.56; P=0.008) and serum folic acid level was decreased significantly (14.74±4.20 vs. 8.80±4.16; P<0.0001) from baseline. CONCLUSIONS Cessation of folic acid supplementations in beta thalassemia major patients can lead to a significant decrease in serum folic acid and increase in Hcy levels. According to our findings and efficacy of folic acid in patients with beta thalassemia major, it is recommended to use the supplementation in all patients.
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2.
The Effects of Homocysteine on the Skeleton.
Saito, M, Marumo, K
Current osteoporosis reports. 2018;(5):554-560
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW Homocystinuria is a congenital metabolic disorder in which cystathionine β-synthase deficiency results in a prominent increase in homocysteine (serum levels > 100 μM), causing mental retardation, atherosclerotic cerebral infarction, and osteoporosis accompanied by fragility fractures. Encountering a case with excessive homocysteinemia such as that seen in hereditary homocystinuria is unlikely during usual medical examinations. However, in individuals who have vitamin B or folate deficiency, serum homocysteine concentrations are known to increase. These individuals may also have a polymorphism in methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase, MTHFR (C677T: TT type), which regulates homocysteine metabolism. These changes in homocysteine levels may elicit symptoms resembling those of homocystinuria (e.g., Alzheimer's disease, atherosclerosis, osteoporosis). RECENT FINDINGS High serum homocysteine has been shown to have detrimental effects on neural cells, vascular endothelial cells, osteoblasts, and osteoclasts. Homocysteine is also known to increase oxidative stress, disrupt cross-linking of collagen molecules, and increase levels of advanced glycation end products, which results in reduced bone strength through a mechanism that goes beyond low bone density and increased bone resorption. Therefore, high serum homocysteine may be regarded as a factor that can reduce both bone mass and impair bone quality. In this review, we outline the epidemiology and pathophysiology of osteoporosis associated with hyperhomocysteinemia.
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3.
Vitamin B12 and Homocysteine Levels Predict Different Outcomes in Early Parkinson's Disease.
Christine, CW, Auinger, P, Joslin, A, Yelpaala, Y, Green, R, ,
Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society. 2018;(5):762-770
Abstract
BACKGROUND In moderately advanced Parkinson's disease (PD), low serum vitamin B12 levels are common and are associated with neuropathy and cognitive impairment. However, little is known about B12 in early PD. OBJECTIVE To determine the prevalence of low vitamin B12 status in early PD and whether it is associated with clinical progression. METHODS We measured vitamin B12 and other B12 status determinants (methylmalonic acid, homocysteine, and holotranscobalamin) in 680 baseline and 456 follow-up serum samples collected from DATATOP participants with early, untreated PD. Borderline low B12 status was defined as serum B12 <184 pmol/L (250 pg/mL), and elevated homocysteine was defined as >15 µmol/L. Outcomes included the UPDRS, ambulatory capacity score (sum of UPDRS items 13-15, 29&30), and MMSE, calculated as annualized rates of change. RESULTS At baseline, 13% had borderline low B12 levels, 7% had elevated homocysteine, whereas 2% had both. Elevated homocysteine at baseline was associated with worse scores on the baseline MMSE. Analysis of study outcomes showed that compared with the other tertiles, participants in the low B12 tertile (<234 pmol/L; 317 pg/mL) developed greater morbidity as assessed by greater annualized worsening of the ambulatory capacity score. Elevated homocysteine was associated with greater annualized decline in MMSE (-1.96 vs. 0.06; P = 0001). Blood count indices were not associated with B12 or homocysteine status. CONCLUSIONS In this study of early PD, low B12 status was common. Low B12 at baseline predicted greater worsening of mobility whereas elevated homocysteine predicted greater cognitive decline. Given that low B12 and elevated homocysteine can improve with vitamin supplementation, future studies should test whether prevention or early correction of these nutritionally modifiable conditions slows development of disability. © 2018 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
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4.
The current status of homocysteine as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease: a mini review.
Chrysant, SG, Chrysant, GS
Expert review of cardiovascular therapy. 2018;(8):559-565
Abstract
Hyperhomocysteinemia has been considered as a risk factor for systemic atherosclerosis, cardiovascular disease (CVD) and stroke and many epidemiologic and case-controlled studies have demonstrated its association with these complications. In addition, treatment of hyperhomocysteinemia with folic acid ± B vitamins prevents the development of atherosclerosis, CVD and strokes. However, subsequent prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled trials have not shown an association of high homocysteine levels or their lowering with treatment with the incidence of atherosclerosis, CVD or strokes, due possibly, to the fortification of flower with folic acid. Therefore, at present, there is a controversy regarding the significance of homocysteine as a risk factor for CVD and stroke and whether patients should be routinely screened for homocysteine. Areas covered: For these reasons, a focused Medline search of the English language literature was conducted between 2010 and 2017 using the terms, homocysteine, risk factor, atherosclerosis, cardiovascular disease, stroke, treatment, and 38 papers with pertinent information were selected. Expert commentary: The review of data disclosed that there is a great controversy regarding the significance of homocysteine as a risk factor for CVD and stroke. The data from these papers together with collateral literature will be discussed in this mini review.
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5.
MTHFR Gene and Serum Folate Interaction on Serum Homocysteine Lowering: Prospect for Precision Folic Acid Treatment.
Huang, X, Qin, X, Yang, W, Liu, L, Jiang, C, Zhang, X, Jiang, S, Bao, H, Su, H, Li, P, et al
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology. 2018;(3):679-685
Abstract
OBJECTIVE This post hoc analysis of the CSPPT (China Stroke Primary Prevention Trial) assessed the individual variation in total homocysteine (tHcy)-lowering response after an average 4.5 years of 0.8 mg daily folic acid therapy in Chinese hypertensive adults and evaluated effect modification by methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) C677T genotypes and serum folate levels. APPROACH AND RESULTS This analysis included 16 413 participants from the CSPPT, who were randomly assigned to 2 double-blind treatment groups: either 10-mg enalapril+0.8-mg folic acid or 10-mg enalapril, daily and had individual measurements of serum folate and tHcy levels at baseline and exit visits and MTHFR C677T genotypes. Mean baseline tHcy levels were comparable between the 2 treatment groups (14.5±8.5 versus 14.4±8.1 μmol/L; P=0.561). After 4.5 years of treatment, mean tHcy levels were reduced to 12.7±6.1 μmol/L in the enalapril+folic acid group, but almost stayed the same in the enalapril group (14.4±7.9 μmol/L, group difference: 1.61 μmol/L; 11% reduction). More importantly, tHcy lowering varied by MTHFR genotypes and serum folate levels. Compared with CC and CT genotypes, participants with the TT genotype had a more prominent L-shaped curve between tHcy and serum folate levels and required higher folate levels (at least 15 ng/mL) to eliminate the differences in tHcy by genotypes. CONCLUSIONS Compared with CC or CT, tHcy in the TT group manifested a heightened L-shaped curve from low to high folate levels, but this difference in tHcy by genotype was eliminated when plasma folate levels reach ≈15 ng/mL or higher. Our data raised the prospect to tailor folic acid therapy according to individual MTHFR C677T genotype and folate status. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00794885.
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6.
A systematic review of the vitamin B12, folate and homocysteine triad across body mass index.
Wiebe, N, Field, CJ, Tonelli, M
Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity. 2018;(11):1608-1618
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Multiple studies have explored the association between serum or plasma vitamin B12 status and obesity, in part because of the relationship between elevated homocysteine concentrations and atherosclerosis. This review will address the inconsistent finding of these studies with the objective of determining whether vitamin B12 concentrations are lower in people with higher body mass indices. DESIGN MEDLINE and EMBASE were searched to February 2017. Observational studies in general and clinical populations comparing serum/plasma B12 concentrations across groups of different body mass indices were selected. We did network and pairwise meta-analyses of serum/plasma B12, folate and homocysteine using frequentist techniques. Evidence-based items potentially indicating risk of bias were assessed. RESULTS Of 844 citations, we identified 19 eligible observational studies with 7,055 participants. The overall network, while showing no significant inconsistency between indirect and direct comparisons (P = 0.34), was qualitatively inconsistent. Based on the results of the meta-regression, in an exploratory sub-network meta-analysis where obesity groups were combined, we excluded disease-specific populations and studies with inadequate description of populations. The direction of the indirect and direct evidence was consistent. The pairwise results from this sub-network showed lower levels of B12 in people with higher body mass indices: obesity versus control difference in means (MD) -56 pmol L-1 (95% CI -90, -23), obesity versus overweight MD -21 pmol L-1 (95% CI -37, -5) and overweight versus control MD -51 pmol L-1 (95% CI -51, -24). Heterogeneity remained very large for most comparisons, and all the studies carried a high risk for bias. CONCLUSIONS This review did not establish an inverse association (or J-curve) between serum or plasma B12 concentrations and body mass index, but the direct pairwise evidence is consistent with an inverse association and supports further investigation.
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7.
Colorectal polyp risk is linked to an elevated level of homocysteine.
Sun, M, Sun, M, Zhang, L, Shi, S
Bioscience reports. 2018;(2)
Abstract
Several studies have reported an association between levels of folate, homocysteine, and vitamin B12 and the risk of colorectal polyps. Here, our aim is to examine the possible effect of folate, homocysteine, and vitamin B12 levels on the risk of colorectal polyps by means of meta-analysis based quantitative synthesis. According to our inclusion/exclusion criteria, a total of 13 case-control studies were enrolled. The P-value of the association test, standard mean difference (SMD), and 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated. Pooled analysis data showed a negative correlation between the risk of colorectal polyps and the levels of serum folate, red blood cell (RBC) folate, or vitamin B12 (all P>0.05). Nevertheless, for homocysteine level, we also observed a statistically significant difference between cases and controls in the overall and subgroup analysis of hospital-based control (HB), population-based control (PB), Chinese, Caucasian, or Asian (all P<0.05, SMD > 0). We found that increased levels of homocysteine may be statistically and significantly related to the risk of colorectal polyps.
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8.
The risk association of plasma total homocysteine with acute myocardial infarction is modified by serum vitamin A.
Olsen, T, Vinknes, KJ, Svingen, GF, Pedersen, ER, Dhar, I, Tell, GS, Blomhoff, R, Ueland, PM, Midttun, Ø, Refsum, H, et al
European journal of preventive cardiology. 2018;(15):1612-1620
Abstract
Background Plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) has been implicated in the development of cardiovascular disease, but the mechanisms remain unclear. Vitamin A (Vit-A) is involved in homocysteine metabolism and we therefore explored the potential interaction between plasma tHcy and serum Vit-A in relation to incident acute myocardial infarction. Methods Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess the prospective relationships between tHcy and acute myocardial infarction in 2205 patients from Western Norway undergoing elective coronary angiography for suspected stable angina pectoris. Results are reported as hazard ratio per standard deviation increase in log-transformed tHcy. An interaction term for tHcy × Vit-A was added to multivariate models including age, sex, smoking, apolipoprotein B fasting, statin and aspirin prescription and estimated glomerular filtration rate. Results Geometric mean (geometric standard deviation) age of the participants (64.3% men) was 62.3 (1.24) years. Plasma tHcy was higher among participants in the upper versus lower Vit-A tertile. During 7 (2.4) years of follow-up, 15.1% suffered an AMI. A significant association of plasma tHcy with AMI in the total study population was observed. When we stratified the population according to Vit-A tertiles, plasma tHcy was associated with acute myocardial infarction only in the upper Vit-A tertile (hazard ratio per SD: 1.25, 95% confidence interval: 1.04-1.53, pinteraction = 0.03). Conclusions The risk relationship between plasma tHcy and acute myocardial infarction was modified by serum concentrations of Vit-A in patients with suspected stable angina pectoris. This finding may clarify the relationship between tHcy and cardiovascular disease.
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9.
Effect of long-term low-dose folic acid supplementation on degree of total homocysteine-lowering: major effect modifiers.
Wang, B, Wu, H, Li, Y, Ban, Q, Huang, X, Chen, L, Li, J, Zhang, Y, Cui, Y, He, M, et al
The British journal of nutrition. 2018;(10):1122-1130
Abstract
We sought to examine the potential modifiers in the association between long-term low-dose folic acid supplementation and the reduction of serum total homocysteine (tHcy) among hypertensive patients, using data from the China Stroke Primary Prevention Trial (CSPPT). This analysis included 16 867 participants who had complete data on tHcy measurements at both the baseline and exit visit. After a median treatment period of 4·5 years, folic acid treatment significantly reduced the tHcy levels by 1·6 μmol/l (95 % CI 1·4, 1·8). More importantly, after adjustment for baseline tHcy and other important covariates, a greater degree of tHcy reduction was observed in certain subgroups: males, the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) 677TT genotype, higher baseline tHcy levels (≥12·5 (median) v. <12·5 μmol/l), lower folate levels (<8·0 (median) v. ≥8·0 ng/ml), estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) <60 ml/min per 1·73 m2 (v. 60-<90 and ≥90 ml/min per 1·73 m2), ever smokers and concomitant use of diuretics (P for all interactions <0·05). The degree of tHcy reduction associated with long-term folic acid supplementation can be significantly affected by sex, MTHFR C677T genotypes, baseline folate, tHcy, eGFR levels and smoking status.
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10.
Vitamin D, homocysteine and n-3PUFA status according to physical and cognitive functions in older adults with subjective memory complaint: Results from cross-sectional study of the MAPT trial.
Chhetri, JK, de Souto Barreto, P, Soriano, G, Gennero, I, Cantet, C, Vellas, B
Experimental gerontology. 2018;:71-77
Abstract
OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to investigate the nutritional markers (Vitamin D, homocysteine, n-3PUFA) status of older subjects aged 70 years and older with subjective memory complaint, according to their physical and cognitive function. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES This study is a secondary analysis of the MAPT study. Subjects were classified into four groups: 1) Physical limitation with cognitive impairment (PLCI), 2) cognitive impairment (CI), 3) physical limitation (PL) and 4) no physical or cognitive deficits (NPCD). Baseline nutritional characteristics of the four groups according to Vitamin D (n = 732), Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (n-3PUFA) (n = 1537) and plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) (n = 729) status were investigated. Analysis was performed taking continuous and dichotomized value for Vitamin D insufficiency ([25(OH)D] < 30 ng/ml, high homocysteine level (tHcy ≥ 15 μmol/L) and low n-3PUFA (DHA + EPA ≤ 4.82%) nutritional markers for clinical relevance. RESULTS PLCI group showed the lowest mean level of Vitamin D and highest level tHcy compared to the other groups. In multivariate analysis, taking continuous nutritional markers, only high Vitamin D was associated with reduced likelihood of PLCI (OR 0.97, 95% CI (0.95 to 0.99) P = 0.011). While taking the dichotomized values the group with low levels of n-3PUFA showed higher likelihood of PL only (OR 1.55, 95% CI (1.12 to 2.15), P = 0.009). Furthermore, our sensitivity analysis for Vitamin D with cut-off [25(OH)D] < 20 ng/ml,(i.e., Vitamin D deficiency), showed more likelihood of PL (OR 1.62, 95% CI (1.01 to 2.60) P = 0.046), CI (OR 1.90, 95% CI (1.16 to 3.10) P = 0.010), and highest likelihood of PLCI (OR 1.99, 95% CI (1.21 to 3.28) P = 0.006). CONCLUSION In older adults with subjective memory complaints, Vitamin D deficiency status may present higher likelihood of functional deficits, including coexisting or separate physical and cognitive decline. While older adults with low level of n-3PUFA were more likely to demonstrate physical decline only.