Clinical relevance of testing for metabolic vitamin B12 deficiency in patients with polyneuropathy

Publication date

2022-12

Authors

Warendorf, Janna
van Doormaal, Perry T C
Vrancken, Alexander F.J.E.ISNI 000000039112414X
Verhoeven-Duif, Nanda MORCID 0000-0002-2016-5182ISNI 0000000419419637
Van Eijk, Ruben P.A.ORCID 0000-0002-7132-5967
van den Berg, LeonardISNI 0000000388137302
Notermans, NicoletteORCID 0000-0002-9363-4103ISNI 0000000389872632

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Objective: Determine vitamin B12 threshold levels below which additional testing of methylmalonic acid (MMA) and/or homocysteine (Hcy) is useful to diagnose metabolic vitamin B12 deficiency in patients with polyneuropathy, and how vitamin B12, MMA and Hcy levels relate to the effect of supplementation therapy. Methods: In a retrospective cohort study of 331 patients with polyneuropathy, vitamin B12, MMA and Hcy were measured. Linear regression models with vitamin B12 as dependent and Hcy or MMA as covariate were compared, to assess which was best related to vitamin B12. Threshold vitamin B12 levels for metabolic deficiency (defined as elevatede metabolites) were determined using logistic regression with elevated metabolites as dependent and vitamin B12 as covariate. A structured interview was conducted in 42 patients to evaluate response to vitamin B12 supplementation. Results: MMA was best related to vitamin B12. Using elevated MMA for metabolic deficiency, we found 90% sensitivity at a vitamin B12 threshold level <264 pmol/L (358 pg/mL) and 95% sensitivity at <304 pmol/L (412 pg/mL). Improvement after supplementation was reported by 19% patients and stabilization by 24%. 88% of patients with improvement and 90% with stabilization either had absolute deficiency (Vitamin B12 < 148 pmol/L) or metabolic deficiency (elevated MMA and vitamin B12 ≥ 148 pmol/L). There were no additional patients with improvement or stabilization with isolated elevated Hcy. Conclusion: Testing of MMA has additional value in identifying patients with clinically relevant metabolic deficiency when vitamin B12 is below 304 pmol/L (412 pg/mL). Supplementation can be effective in patients with absolute and metabolic deficiency.

Keywords

homocystein‌, Metabolic deficiency‌, methylmalonic acid, neuropathy, polyneuropathy, vitamin B12, Vitamin deficiency, Vitamin supplementation‌, Nutrition and Dietetics, General Neuroscience, Medicine (miscellaneous), Journal Article

Citation

Warendorf, J K, van Doormaal, P T C, Vrancken, A F J E, Verhoeven-Duif, N M, van Eijk, R P A, van den Berg, L H & Notermans, N C 2022, 'Clinical relevance of testing for metabolic vitamin B12 deficiency in patients with polyneuropathy', Nutritional neuroscience, vol. 25, no. 12, pp. 2536-2546. https://doi.org/10.1080/1028415X.2021.1985751