Vitamin B-ComplexrctRCT2000

Controlled comparison of L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate versus folic acid for the treatment of hyperhomocysteinemia in hemodialysis patients.

Circulation

confidence

Key findings

High-dose L-5-MTHF showed no improved homocysteine-lowering efficacy over folic acid; >90% of patients remained refractory to both regimens.

View source on PubMed (PMID 10859289) ↗

Sample size
50 (25 per group)
Population
Chronic, stable hemodialysis patients with hyperhomocysteinemia
Dosing
Folic acid 15 mg/d OR L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate 17 mg/d; all received vitamin B6 50 mg/d and vitamin B12 1.0 mg/d
Duration
12 weeks
Route
oral
Blinding
not_reported
Controls
active_comparator
Drug class
water-soluble vitamin

Measured endpoints

  • Predialysis total homocysteine (tHcy) percent reductionDecreasedcardiovascular
    not_significanteffect: MTHF 17.0% vs FA 14.8%
  • Final on-treatment tHcy levelDecreasedcardiovascular
    not_significanteffect: MTHF 20.0 vs FA 19.5 micromol/L
  • Normalization of tHcy levels (<12 micromol/L)No changecardiovascular
    not_significanteffect: MTHF 2/25 (8%) vs FA 0/25 (0%)
Full abstract

The hyperhomocysteinemia regularly found in hemodialysis patients is largely refractory to combined oral B-vitamin supplementation featuring supraphysiological doses of folic acid. We evaluated whether a high-dose L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate-based regimen provided improved total homocysteine (tHcy)-lowering efficacy in chronic hemodialysis patients. We block-randomized 50 chronic, stable hemodialysis patients on the basis of their screening predialysis tHcy levels, sex, and dialysis center into 2 groups of 25 subjects treated for 12 weeks with oral folic acid at 15 mg/d (FA group) or an equimolar amount (17 mg/d) of oral L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate (MTHF group). All 50 subjects also received 50 mg/d of oral vitamin B(6) and 1.0 mg/d of oral vitamin B(12). The mean percent reductions (+/-95% CIs) in predialysis tHcy were not significantly different: MTHF, 17.0% (12.0% to 22.0%); FA, 14.8% (9.6% to 20.1%); P=0.444 by matched ANCOVA adjusted for pretreatment tHcy. Final on-treatment values (mean with 95% CI) were MTHF, 20.0 micromol/L (18.8 to 21.2 micromol/L); FA, 19.5 micromol/L (18.3 to 20.7 micromol/L). Moreover, neither treatment resulted in "normalization" of tHcy levels (ie, final on-treatment values &lt;12 micromol/L) among a significantly different or clinically meaningful number of patients: MTHF, 2 of 25 (8%); FA, 0 of 25 (0%); Fisher's exact test of between-groups difference, P=0.490. Relative to high-dose folic acid, high-dose oral L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate-based supplementation does not afford improved tHcy-lowering efficacy in hemodialysis patients. The preponderance of hemodialysis patients (ie, &gt;90%) exhibit mild hyperhomocysteinemia refractory to treatment with either regimen. This treatment refractoriness is not related to defects in folate absorption or circulating plasma and tissue distribution.

Research information, not medical advice. StudyKit summarizes published studies to help you understand your protocol. It does not diagnose, treat, or replace a clinician. Talk to a qualified provider before changing anything you take.