Biomarker responses to folic acid intervention in healthy adults: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials


Autoria(s): Duffy, Maresa E; Hoey, Leane; Hughes, Catherine F; Strain, J J; Rankin, Audrey; Souverein, Olga W; Dullemeijer, Carla; Collings, Rachel; Hooper, Lee; McNulty, Helene
Data(s)

01/01/2014

Resumo

<p>BACKGROUND: The task of revising dietary folate recommendations for optimal health is complicated by a lack of data quantifying the biomarker response that reliably reflects a given folate intake.</p><p>OBJECTIVE: We conducted a dose-response meta-analysis in healthy adults to quantify the typical response of recognized folate biomarkers to a change in folic acid intake.</p><p>DESIGN: Electronic and bibliographic searches identified 19 randomized controlled trials that supplemented with folic acid and measured folate biomarkers before and after the intervention in apparently healthy adults aged ≥18 y. For each biomarker response, the regression coefficient (β) for individual studies and the overall pooled β were calculated by using random-effects meta-analysis.</p><p>RESULTS: Folate biomarkers (serum/plasma and red blood cell folate) increased in response to folic acid in a dose-response manner only up to an intake of 400 μg/d. Calculation of the overall pooled β for studies in the range of 50 to 400 μg/d indicated that a doubling of folic acid intake resulted in an increase in serum/plasma folate by 63% (71% for microbiological assay; 61% for nonmicrobiological assay) and red blood cell folate by 31% (irrespective of whether microbiological or other assay was used). Studies that used the microbiological assay indicated lower heterogeneity compared with studies using nonmicrobiological assays for determining serum/plasma (I(2) = 13.5% compared with I(2) = 77.2%) and red blood cell (I(2) = 45.9% compared with I(2) = 70.2%) folate.</p><p>CONCLUSIONS: Studies administering >400 μg folic acid/d show no dose-response relation and thus will not yield meaningful results for consideration when generating dietary folate recommendations. The calculated folate biomarker response to a given folic acid intake may be more robust with the use of a microbiological assay rather than alternative methods for blood folate measurement.</p>

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/biomarker-responses-to-folic-acid-intervention-in-healthy-adults-a-metaanalysis-of-randomized-controlled-trials(6989d7f9-d9ef-4fb1-8654-61b1bffb2eb3).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.113.062752

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Duffy , M E , Hoey , L , Hughes , C F , Strain , J J , Rankin , A , Souverein , O W , Dullemeijer , C , Collings , R , Hooper , L & McNulty , H 2014 , ' Biomarker responses to folic acid intervention in healthy adults: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials ' The American journal of clinical nutrition , vol 99 , no. 1 , pp. 96-106 . DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.113.062752

Palavras-Chave #Biomarkers #Diet #Dietary Supplements #Dose-Response Relationship, Drug #Erythrocytes #Folic Acid #Homocysteine #Humans #Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic #Reproducibility of Results #Sensitivity and Specificity
Tipo

article