Reversal by cobalamin therapy of minimal defects in the deoxyuridine suppression test in patients without anemia: further evidence for a subtle metabolic cobalamin deficiency
- PMID: 1541874
Reversal by cobalamin therapy of minimal defects in the deoxyuridine suppression test in patients without anemia: further evidence for a subtle metabolic cobalamin deficiency
Abstract
Subtle cobalamin deficiency states, where low serum cobalamin levels are not accompanied by megaloblastic anemia or malabsorption of free cobalamin, often display metabolic evidence of cellular depletion as shown by the deoxyuridine suppression test. However, the suppression test abnormalities are usually mild and are sometimes atypical; moreover, their response to cobalamin therapy has never been documented. Four patients with this subtle defect, at least three of whom had food-cobalamin malabsorption, were therefore tested before and after cobalamin treatment. Each patient had low serum cobalamin levels but did not have megaloblastic anemia, and all but one had normal serum levels of methylmalonic acid and total homocysteine. Two patients had mildly but typically cobalamin-deficient deoxyuridine suppression test results (baseline values 15.7% and 12.8%; normal less than 8.5%). The other two patients had normal or borderline baseline values (5.4% and 8.9%) that became abnormal on incubation with methyl tetrahydrofolate (16.1% and 12.3%), a pattern previously noted in subtle acquired and hereditary cobalamin deficiencies. After 6 months of cobalamin therapy, the deoxyuridine suppression test abnormalities reversed in all four patients. These findings show that the mild deoxyuridine suppression test stigmata of subtle cobalamin deficiency respond to therapy and thus represent true metabolic deficiency; the unusual abnormality induced in vitro by added methyl tetrahydrofolate responds as well, indicating that it, too, represents metabolic cobalamin deficiency. The findings provide further proof that subtle cobalamin deficiency often exists even when megaloblastic anemia and malabsorption of free cobalamin are lacking, and that the deoxyuridine suppression test can be a reliable tool for its identification.
Similar articles
-
Low serum cobalamin levels in primary degenerative dementia. Do some patients harbor atypical cobalamin deficiency states?Arch Intern Med. 1987 Mar;147(3):429-31. Arch Intern Med. 1987. PMID: 3827417
-
The deoxyuridine suppression test identifies subtle cobalamin deficiency in patients without typical megaloblastic anemia.JAMA. 1985 Mar 1;253(9):1284-7. JAMA. 1985. PMID: 3968853
-
Atypical cobalamin deficiency. Subtle biochemical evidence of deficiency is commonly demonstrable in patients without megaloblastic anemia and is often associated with protein-bound cobalamin malabsorption.J Lab Clin Med. 1987 Apr;109(4):454-63. J Lab Clin Med. 1987. PMID: 3819580
-
Modern clinical testing strategies in cobalamin and folate deficiency.Semin Hematol. 1999 Jan;36(1):35-46. Semin Hematol. 1999. PMID: 9930567 Review.
-
[Vitamin B12 deficiency in geriatrics].Praxis (Bern 1994). 1999 Nov 4;88(45):1867-75. Praxis (Bern 1994). 1999. PMID: 10589285 Review. German.
Cited by
-
Biomarkers of cobalamin (vitamin B-12) status in the epidemiologic setting: a critical overview of context, applications, and performance characteristics of cobalamin, methylmalonic acid, and holotranscobalamin II.Am J Clin Nutr. 2011 Jul;94(1):348S-358S. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.111.013441. Epub 2011 May 18. Am J Clin Nutr. 2011. PMID: 21593511 Free PMC article. Review.
-
Age-related changes in cobalamin (vitamin B12) handling. Implications for therapy.Drugs Aging. 1998 Apr;12(4):277-92. doi: 10.2165/00002512-199812040-00003. Drugs Aging. 1998. PMID: 9571392 Review.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Medical