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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 89, Issue 6, Pages 1981S-1996SPublisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.2009.27230C
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Background: Mild vitamin B-12 deficiency is common among older adults, but evidence for setting dietary recommendations is limited because most studies have administered vitamin B-12 via nonoral routes or at doses several hundred times higher than current recommendations. Furthermore, different biomarkers of vitamin B-12 status have not been systematically reviewed. Objective: The aim was to assess the effectiveness of biomarkers of vitamin B-12 status through a systematic review of published randomized controlled trials of oral vitamin B-12 supplementation. Design: Methods included a structured search strategy on Ovid MEDLINE, EMBASE (Ovid), and Cochrane databases; formal inclusion and exclusion criteria; data extraction; validity assessment; and meta-analysis. Results: Eight randomized controlled trials were included, and all studies measured serum and plasma total vitamin B-12, 3 studies measured methylmalonic acid, and 6 studies measured total homocysteine response. All 3 biomarkers were found to be effective measures of altered vitamin B-12 intake in populations with low and borderline baseline vitamin B-12 status (P < 0.00001); however, in the case of total vitamin B-12, substantial heterogeneity that could not be fully explained by subgroup analysis was observed. Insufficient data were available to determine the effectiveness of plasma holotranscobalamin, which was measured in only one randomized controlled trial. Conclusions: The available evidence suggests that plasma and serum concentrations of total vitamin B-12, methylmalonic acid, and total homocysteine are all effective biomarkers of a change in vitamin B-12 intake; however, because the available data were limited, it was not possible to examine fully the factors that could explain the substantial heterogeneity in total vitamin B-12. Future trials should include low-dose vitamin B-12 in adults across the entire age spectrum and measure the holotranscobalamin response to supplementation. Am J Clin Nutr 2009; 89(suppl): 1981S-96S.
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