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 reductionDecreasedcardiovascularnot_significanteffect: MTHF 17.0% vs FA 14.8%
- Final on-treatment tHcy levelDecreasedcardiovascularnot_significanteffect: MTHF 20.0 vs FA 19.5 micromol/L
- Normalization of tHcy levels (<12 micromol/L)No changecardiovascularnot_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 <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, >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.