Combination of low-dose folic acid and pyridoxine for treatment of hyperhomocysteinaemia in patients with premature arterial disease and their relatives.

Journal: Atherosclerosis
Published:
Abstract

Hyperhomocysteinaemia is an independent risk factor for atherosclerotic disease and venous thrombosis. The optimal homocysteine-lowering vitamin dose and target total homocysteine (tHcy) concentration are currently unknown. We prospectively studied the homocysteine-lowering effect after 8 weeks low-dose combination of folic acid (0.5 mg) and pyridoxine (100 mg) in 49 hyperhomocysteinaemic persons (33 patients with documented premature arterial disease and 16 of their first-degree relatives). Hyperhomocysteinaemia was in both sexes defined as fasting tHcy concentration > 12 micromol/l and/or post-methionine load tHcy concentration > 38 micromol/l. Low-dose vitamin therapy significantly reduced fasting tHcy concentration (median 13.9 to 9.3 micromol/l, reduction 32% (95% CI: 27-37%)) and post-load tHcy concentration (median 55.2 to 36.5 micromol/l, reduction 30% (95% CI: 25-35%)). Fasting tHcy reduction was similar in women and men, as well as in patients and relatives. Post-load tHcy reduction was significantly less in men compared to women (P = 0.04) and in relatives compared to patients (P = 0.03). Although low-dose combination of folic acid and pyridoxine results in a substantial reduction of tHcy concentrations (30-32%) in subjects with hyperhomocysteinaemia, the normalisation percentage to predefined criteria was less impressive (49%).

Authors
R Van Der Griend, F Haas, D Biesma, M Duran, O Meuwissen, J Banga
Relevant Conditions

Malabsorption, Malnutrition