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Nephrol Dial Transplant (2002) 17: 865-870
© 2002 European Renal Association-European Dialysis and Transplant Association

Hyperhomocysteinaemia therapy in haemodialysis patients: folinic versus folic acid in combination with vitamin B6 and B12

Didier Ducloux1, Abdelfatah Aboubakr1, Gérard Motte1, Gérard Toubin2, Véronique Fournier3, Jean-Marc Chalopin1, Tilman Drüeke5 and Ziad A. Massy4,5,

1 Division of Nephrology, 2 Biochemistry B Laboratory, CHU St Jacques, Besançon, 3 Division of Nephrology, CH André Boulloche, Montbéliard, 4 Division of Nephrology, CH Beauvais and 5 INSERM U507, Necker Hospital, Paris, France

Background. In a recent uncontrolled retrospective report we suggested that the long-term supplementation of high-dose, i.v. folinic acid combined with high-dose i.v. pyridoxine was highly effective in correcting plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) concentrations in haemodialysis patients. To confirm these findings, we conducted a randomized, controlled trial aimed at evaluating whether i.v. or oral folinic acid provided improved tHcy-lowering efficacy in haemodialysis patients compared with oral folic acid.

Methods. In a 6-month prospective, randomized, controlled trial, 60 chronic haemodialysis patients, matched for age, gender, dialysis duration, and average screening pre-treatment-fasting tHcy levels, were given either 50 mg/week of i.v. calcium folinate (group 1), 50 mg/week of oral calcium folinate (group 2), or 45 mg/week oral folic acid (group 3). All 60 patients also received 750 mg/week of i.v. vitamin B6 and 3 mg/week of oral vitamin B12.

Results. Fasting tHcy decreased significantly and to a similar extent in the three groups after 2 months of treatment and remained stable at 4 and 6 months (16.6±3.5, 18.3±4, and 19.1±3.1, in groups 1, 2, and 3, respectively, P=NS). Mean percentage reduction at 6 months was also similar in the three treatment groups (46, 43, and 42% in groups 1, 2, and 3, respectively, P=NS).

Conclusions. These findings show that the tHcy-lowering effects of high-dose i.v. folinic acid, oral folinic acid, or oral folic acid were comparable, suggesting that the hyperhomocysteinaemia observed in haemodialysis patients is not due to abnormal folate metabolism. Furthermore, they are compatible with the view that other abnormalities are also involved in the impaired clearance of homocysteine in uraemic patients.

Keywords: dialysis; folic acid; folinic acid; homocyst(e)ine; vitamin B6; vitamin B12

Correspondence and offprint requests to: Ziad A. Massy, INSERM U507, Necker Hospital, 161 rue de Sèvres, F-75730 Paris, Cedex 15, France. Email: massy{at}necker.fr1.


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