1 / 15

Mary Hannon-Fletcher

Micronutrient supplementation in haemodialysis patient enhances folate levels and reduces homocysteine. Mary Hannon-Fletcher. 4th Annual Translational Medicine Conference City Hotel, Derry/Londonderry, Northern Ireland 10-11 May 2012. Background.

kimballr
Download Presentation

Mary Hannon-Fletcher

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Micronutrient supplementation in haemodialysis patient enhances folate levels and reduces homocysteine Mary Hannon-Fletcher 4th Annual Translational Medicine Conference City Hotel, Derry/Londonderry, Northern Ireland 10-11 May 2012

  2. Background • Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are the leading cause of death in HD patients • 40-50% of the mortality • In addition to the traditional risk factors for CVD • Patients undergoing haemodialysis (HD) have additional cardiovascular risk factors: • hyperhomocysteinaemia • <15µmol/L, increased risk of cardiovascular disease < 10µmol/L • increased vascular oxidative stress • HD enhances this metabolic disorder

  3. Hyperhomocysteinaemia

  4. Oxidative Stress • Imbalance in the pro-oxidant : antioxidant. • overproduction of the precursors of reactive oxygen species (ROS) • decreased efficiency of inhibitory and scavenging systems • Antioxidants defences compromised in HD patients • ROS are well known to be capable of causing cellular and tissue damage

  5. Diet in HD patients • Malnutrition is prevalent in 40-50% • Very restricted diets resulting in regulation of certain nutrients such as: • sodium, potassium, phosphate, protein & fluids • Reduction or exclusion of certain foods increases the risk of inadequate intakes • Under-nutrition exacerbates oxidative stress • Together with the increased losses of essential minerals and water-soluble vitamins via HD • Many studies have reported HD patients deficient in several important vitamins

  6. Aims • To examine the effect of a 12 month placebo controlled micronutrient supplement (containing folic acid, B vitamins, antioxidant vitamins and trace elements) on folate and homocysteine (tHcy) levels in HD patients

  7. Study Design Recruited n = 39 Baseline clinical history: blood Treatment n =18 Placebo n=19 Randomised to treatment on baseline tHcy 48 week intervention n=16 n = 14 Post Intervention clinical history: blood

  8. Participants and Methods • Ethical permission was obtained from ORECNI and Governance was obtained from the WHSCT • tHcy was measured using an immunoassay • Plasma folate and whole blood folate were measured by a microbiological assay • Supplements were provided monthly in a bottle by the pharmacist • Volunteers were withdrawn if less than 90% of the supplements were taken

  9. Table 1: Volunteer Baseline Characteristics Values are presented as mean ± SD

  10. Figure 1. Changes in plasma folate, whole blood folate and tHcy post a 12 month placebo controlled multivitamin supplement in HD patients. Plasma Folateng/ml WBF ng/ml tHcymmol/l * Values mean ± standard deviation. * p>0.05; **p>0.002; *** p>0.0001

  11. Figure 2. % Response to Intervention % Response Values mean ± standard deviation. * p>0.05; **p>0.002; *** p>0.0001 ((post-intervention - pre-intervention value)/pre-intervention)*100

  12. Summary • Plasma and whole blood folate increased significantly in the treatment group • tHcy significantly decreased in the treatment group • Such that post intervention we report a 20% reduction in tHcy in the treatment group • tHcy post (20.5 ± 9.4 mmol/l), while levels remained high in the placebo group (25.3 ± 5.4 mmol/l)

  13. Conclusion • The improvement in folate status suggests a benefit of this type of intervention in the treatment of the oxidative damage in HD patients • The significant decrease in tHcy has a beneficial effect on these patients • This provides evidence that this type of treatment should be introduce into clinical care in HD patients • However, not all patients respond well i.e. no or little change in tHcy • Further research is required to investigate these non responders

  14. Acknowledgements • Supported by grant from WHCST • Amgen / Irish Nephrological Society Research Award • Thanks to the research group: • Dr Peter Garrett • Ms Twyla Moffitt • Dr Ann Molloy

  15. Supplement Prescription: Patent Protected

More Related