U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH NIH News
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development (NICHD) <http://www.nichd.nih.gov/>
Embargoed for Release: Monday, March 2, 2009, 12:01 a.m. EST
LOW LEVELS OF VITAMIN B12 MAY INCREASE RISK FOR NEURAL TUBE
DEFECTS
Children born to women who have low blood levels of vitamin B12 shortly before
and after conception may have an increased risk of a neural tube defect, according to an analysis
by researchers at the National
Institutes of Health, Trinity College Dublin, and the Health Research Board
of Ireland.
Women with the lowest B12 levels had 5 times the risk of having a child with a
neural tube defect compared to women with the highest B12 levels.
Women who consume little or no meat or animal based foods are the most likely
group of women to have low B12 levels, along with women who have intestinal
disorders that prevent them from absorbing sufficient amounts of B12.
Neural tube defects are a class of birth defects affecting the brain and spinal
cord. One type, spina bifida, can cause partial
paralysis. Another type, anencephaly, is a fatal defect in which the
brain and skull are severely underdeveloped.
Researchers have known that taking another nutrient, folic acid, during the
weeks before and after conception can greatly reduce a woman's chances of having
a child with a neural tube defect. Folic acid is the synthetic form of the
vitamin folate. In the United States,
cereal grains are fortified with folic acid to reduce the occurrence of neural
tube defects in the U.S.
population.
The study appears in the March Pediatrics. The study's first author was
Anne M. Molloy, Ph.D., Trinity College Dublin. Scientists from the Health
Research Board of Ireland and two NIH institutes, the Eunice Kennedy Shriver
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Human Genome Research Institute,
also took part in the study.
"Vitamin B12 is essential for the functioning of the nervous system and
for the production of red blood cells," said Duane
Alexander, M.D., director of the NICHD. "The results
of this study suggest that women with low levels of B12 not only may risk
health problems of their own, but also may increase the chance that their
children may be born with a serious birth defect."
Ireland has a
high rate of neural tube defects, and NIH scientists have frequently
collaborated with Irish researchers to gain insight into the causes of this
group of disorders.
To conduct the study, the researchers analyzed stored blood samples originally
collected during early pregnancy from three groups of Irish women between 1983
and 1990. During that time, pregnant women in Ireland
rarely took vitamin
supplements. The study authors reasoned that the lack of
routine vitamin supplementation would allow them to identify a sufficient
number of women with low Vitamin B12 to conduct their analysis.
For their analysis, the researchers classified the women into three
groups. The first group consisted of 95 women who were pregnant with a
child having a neural tube defect at the time the blood was taken. The
second group was composed of 107 women who had previously given birth to a
child with a neural tube defect but whose current pregnancy was not
affected. Like the first group, women in the third group (a total of 76)
were pregnant with a child having a neural tube defect at the time the blood
sample was obtained, but were enrolled in a different study than the women in
group 1. The researchers measured the Vitamin B12 and folate levels of
the women's blood samples, and compared them to those of control groups whose
pregnancies were unaffected by a neural tube defect.
Because low folate levels are a known risk factor for neural tube defects, the
researchers used statistical
techniques to evaluate the role of Vitamin B12 independently of
the role of folate. In all three groups, women with low B12 concentrations
(estimated at less than 250 ng/L, before pregnancy) had 2.5-3 times the risk of
having a child with a neural tube defect compared to those with higher levels.
Women with levels in the deficient range (0-149 ng/L ) were at the highest
risk: 5 times that of women with higher levels.
The study authors wrote that it is not known how B12 and folate might interact
to influence the formation of the neural tube, the embryonic structure that
gives rise to the spine and brain. They noted that the two vitamins are
jointly involved with several key biochemical reactions, as well as with the
synthesis of DNA. Lack of either Vitamin B12 or folate in any of these
chemical processes theoretically could increase the risk of a neural tube
defect.
The authors noted that their results needed to be confirmed by other studies
among other populations of women. They suggested, however, that women
should have Vitamin B12 levels above 300 ng/L before becoming pregnant.
(Because B12 levels drop sharply during pregnancy, the researchers adjusted the
levels measured during pregnancy to provide a target level for women to achieve
before they become pregnant.)
Because Vitamin B12 comes from foods of animal origin, women who adhere to a strict vegan diet
may be at risk for a B12
deficiency, said an NICHD author of the paper, James L. Mills,
M.D., senior investigator in the Division of Epidemiology, Statistics, and
Prevention Research. He added it is advisable for women with digestive
disorders that interfere with the absorption of foods to consult a physician
before getting pregnant, to make sure they are receiving adequate amounts of
B12.
Dr. Mills explained that critical events in the formation of the brain and
spinal column occur very early in pregnancy-in the first 28 days after
conception-before many women even realize they are pregnant.
He added that the U.S. Public Health Service recommends that all women of
childbearing age consume 400 micrograms of folic acid each day. This
amount assures that a woman will have adequate stores of the vitamin, in the
event of an unintended pregnancy.
"If women wait until they realize that they are pregnant before they start
taking folic acid, it is usually too late," Dr. Mills said.
Similarly, he said, it would be wise for all women of childbearing age to
consume the recommended amount of Vitamin B12, whether they are planning a
pregnancy or not. "Half of the women who become pregnant each year
in the U.S.
were not planning to become pregnant."
"Our results offer evidence that women who have adequate B12 levels before
they become pregnant may further reduce the occurrence of this class of birth
defects," Dr. Mills said.
Vitamin B12 is available in milk, meats, poultry, eggs, as well as fortified
cereals and some other fortified
foods. Information on foods that contain Vitamin B12, as
well as the Recommended Dietary Allowances for the
vitamin, is available from the NIH Office of Dietary
Supplements, <http://dietary-supplements.info.nih.gov/factsheets/vitaminb12.asp>.
Folate is found in leafy
green vegetables, fruits, and dried beans and peas.
Information on sources of folate also is available from the NIH Office of
Dietary Supplements, <http://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/folate.asp>.