Ray J G, Blom H J
Division of Obstetrical Medicine, Department of Medicine, Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
QJM. 2003 Apr;96(4):289-95. doi: 10.1093/qjmed/hcg043.
Although maternal folate insufficiency is a risk factor for fetal neural tube defects (NTDs), there is controversy about whether vitamin B12 (B12) insufficiency is also associated with an increased risk of NTDs.
To investigate whether low maternal B12 is associated with an increased risk of fetal NTDs.
Systematic review.
A systematic search of Medline between 1980 and October 2002, with an examination of the citations of all retrieved studies. Studies were included that: (i) used a cohort or case-control design; (ii) included case mothers with a prior or current NTD-affected pregnancy; (iii) assessed a group of unaffected 'controls'; and (iv) measured the vitamin B12 status of all participants.
Overall, 17 case-control studies were included, mean sample size 33 cases and 93 controls. In 5/6, mean amniotic fluid B12 concentration was significantly lower in case mothers than in controls. Of 11 that measured maternal serum or plasma B12, three observed a significantly lower mean concentration in case mothers vs. controls, while five others found a non-significant lower trend in the case group. One study observed a significantly higher mean concentration of maternal serum methylmalonic acid among the maternal cases, while another found a non-significant lower mean concentration of plasma holo-transcobalamin. Five studies estimated the risk of NTDs in relation to low B12 or B12-related metabolic markers: it was significantly increased in three studies, with a non-significant trend in the fourth.
There seems to be a moderate association between low maternal B12 status and the risk of fetal NTDs. However, several design limitations, and the inclusion of few study participants, may have under-represented this. A large observational study, using reliable and valid indicators of B12 status in early pregnancy, could best assess the association between B12 insufficiency and the risk of fetal NTDs.
尽管母体叶酸不足是胎儿神经管缺陷(NTDs)的一个风险因素,但关于维生素B12(B12)不足是否也与NTDs风险增加相关仍存在争议。
调查母体低B12水平是否与胎儿NTDs风险增加相关。
系统评价。
对1980年至2002年10月期间的Medline进行系统检索,并检查所有检索到的研究的参考文献。纳入的研究需满足:(i)采用队列或病例对照设计;(ii)包括有既往或当前受NTD影响妊娠的病例母亲;(iii)评估一组未受影响的“对照”;(iv)测量所有参与者的维生素B12状态。
总体而言,纳入了17项病例对照研究,平均样本量为33例病例和93例对照。在5/6的研究中,病例母亲羊水B12的平均浓度显著低于对照组。在11项测量母体血清或血浆B12的研究中,3项观察到病例母亲的平均浓度显著低于对照组,而另外5项在病例组中发现了不显著的较低趋势。一项研究观察到母体病例中母体血清甲基丙二酸的平均浓度显著较高,而另一项研究发现血浆全转钴胺素的平均浓度有不显著的较低趋势。5项研究估计了与低B12或B12相关代谢标志物相关的NTDs风险:3项研究中风险显著增加,第4项研究中有不显著的趋势。
母体低B12状态与胎儿NTDs风险之间似乎存在中等程度的关联。然而,一些设计局限性以及纳入的研究参与者较少,可能导致这种关联未得到充分体现。一项大型观察性研究,使用孕早期可靠且有效的B12状态指标,可能最能评估B12不足与胎儿NTDs风险之间的关联。