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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Department of Medicine, New York Methodist Hospital, Brooklyn (XC and RC); the Hematology Department, Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain (AFR and MPS); and the Department of Medicine, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York (RC).
2 Supported by the Department of Medicine, New York Methodist Hospital, and by grant DK 32640 from the National Institutes of Health. 3 Reprints not available. Address correspondence to R Carmel, New York Methodist Hospital, 506 Sixth Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215. E-mail: rac9001{at}nyp.org.
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: The objective was to examine metabolic and absorptive influences on holo-TC II.
Design: Treated patients with pernicious anemia (PA), who have abnormal absorption but a normal metabolic status, were chosen as the model to differentiate between the effects of the 2 cobalamin-related characteristics. Serum holo-TC II and indexes of cobalamin metabolism in 23 treated patients were compared with those of 6 untreated PA patients (abnormal absorption and metabolic status) and 33 control subjects (normal absorption and metabolic status).
Results: Holo-TC II, which correlated directly with cobalamin and inversely with homocysteine, was significantly higher in treated PA patients in metabolic remission than in untreated PA patients (74 ± 59 compared with 9 ± 6 pmol/L) and was significantly lower than in control subjects (105 ± 58 pmol/L), although the latter difference was small and the values overlapped greatly.
Conclusions: Metabolic cobalamin status is a major determinant of serum holo-TC II. Absorption status may have mild influence as well, although other explanations remain possible. Serum holo-TC II cannot be used clinically to diagnose cobalamin malabsorption because of overlap with normal values. The influences on holo-TC II are complex and require careful analysis.
Key Words: Holo-transcobalamin II cobalamin cobalamin absorption cobalamin deficiency homocysteine
| INTRODUCTION |
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The second step, defining the cause of the deficiency, usually requires ruling malabsorption in or out, with pernicious anemia (PA; ie, the lack of gastric intrinsic factor) as the classical prototype of cobalamin malabsorption. The Schilling test is commonly used, but its availability is declining. Adequate substitutes have not been found; only about half of the cases of PA can be diagnosed through the demonstration of antibodies to intrinsic factor, and no blood test can identify disorders of cobalamin absorption other than PA (1).
Some investigators have advocated the assay of serum holo-transcobalamin II (holo-TC II)the small, transient fraction of the total cobalamin that is attached to TC II (3). In theory, holo-TC II, the biologically available cobalamin pool in plasma that all cells take up rapidly via specific receptors for TC II (4, 5), seems a more attractive reflection of cobalamin status than does total cobalamin (3), most of which is attached to TC I.
Much of the persisting uncertainty about holo-TC II has both methodologic and conceptual origins (6). Now that accurate assay methods are available (7, 8), the many conceptual uncertainties can be addressed more reliably. One such difficulty was a claim that holo-TC II could serve as a diagnostic index of cobalamin absorption as well as metabolic cobalamin sufficiency (9, 10). Indeed, the holo-TC II concentration was proposed as a "surrogate" for the Schilling test (11). The hypothesis gained currency because TC II binds absorbed cobalamin abluminally in ileal enterocytes and exits into the portal bloodstream (12, 13). Patients with malabsorption might be unable to generate normal amounts of translocated holo-TC II into the bloodstream. However, the quantitative contribution of ileal holo-TC II to plasma holo-TC II is unknown. Moreover, support for serum holo-TC II as a measure of cobalamin absorption is meager, consisting of a study of a few patients with AIDS (9) and of a comparison of holo-TC II with unreliable markers, such as gastric or even duodenal histology, instead of absorption tests (10). Moreover, many studied patients have had deficiency and malabsorption together, which makes clear attributions difficult. The concept that a test can be used to diagnose both deficiency and malabsorption is problematic because the 2 defects are not identical. If holo-TC II truly reflects both processes, holo-TC II changes would perforce lose all diagnostic specificity for either process.
To address these issues of holo-TC II abnormality directly, we studied patients with PA after they were treated with cobalamin. Adequately treated patients still have malabsorption but not deficiency. Normal holo-TC II concentrations in them would favor metabolic status as the chief regulator of serum holo-TC II, whereas low concentrations would favor malabsorption as the major influence; intermediate concentrations would suggest the potential for diagnostic confusion.
| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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2 mo with cyanocobalamin injections, usually after an initial month of weekly or more frequent injections, and were proven to be metabolically normal, although they still had malabsorption. In all cases, the diagnosis of cobalamin deficiency had been made previously; all patients had megaloblastic anemia, myeloneuropathy, or both and had subnormal cobalamin concentrations before treatment. The diagnosis of PA, defined as cobalamin malabsorption caused by a loss of gastric intrinsic factor, was established in all patients by one or more of the following tests: a diagnostic Schilling test (low absorption that became normal on retesting with oral intrinsic factor), absence of gastric intrinsic factor in gastric juice collected after pentagastrin stimulation, and presence of antiintrinsic factor antibody in a blood specimen obtained at a time remote from cobalamin injection.
The only selection factors were that the clinical and diagnostic information was complete and diagnostically conclusive and that an adequate volume of serum obtained remote in time enough from the previous cobalamin injection was available. The blood was usually obtained just before the next monthly injection, and blood samples with cobalamin concentrations >750 pmol/L were not used. These sampling precautions helped avoid spurious elevation of holo-TC II from the transient saturation of TC II by exogenous cobalamin, which occurs during the first few days after injection. The samples were also assayed for serum cobalamin, plasma tHcy and, if needed, MMA concentrations to ensure that the patients were metabolically cobalamin-replete. Completely normal results from those metabolic tests were obtained in 23 of the 32 serum samples collected from treated patients with PA. In the other 9 samples, however, abnormal metabolic status was identified by a low cobalamin concentration (<180 pmol/L), an elevated tHcy concentration (>14.9 µmol/L in men, and >14.5 µmol/L in women), or an elevated MMA concentration (>279 nmol/L), despite regular monthly cobalamin injections. Holo-TC II concentrations played no role in the metabolic assessment of any patient. To ensure a valid study group of treated patients with PA in complete metabolic remission, the 9 patients were excluded so that their residual biochemical evidence of mild cobalamin deficiency, whatever its precise explanation, would not compromise the interpretation of data in the key study groupthe 23 treated patients with PA whose normal metabolic findings satisfactorily indicated cobalamin malabsorption without cobalamin deficiency.
In addition, we tested identically processed and stored samples collected from 6 untreated cobalamin-deficient patients with PA; all 6 had abnormal metabolic findings. Because holo-TC II is known to be low in untreated patients with PA (3, 7, 8), and because holo-TC concentrations in the 6 samples were all low, additional specimens from untreated patients were not sought. The 23 serum samples from patients with treated PA in metabolic remission also included posttreatment samples from 4 of the 6 untreated PA patients; these 4 pairs of matched samples allowed direct comparisons of holo-TC II to be made before and after treatment.
A final group consisted of 33 samples from apparently healthy persons with no clinical or biochemical evidence for cobalamin deficiency. These persons were slightly but not significantly older than the treated PA patients (59 ± 14 compared with 53 ± 17 y). An essential requirement was that the samples be obtained over the same time span from the same institutions and were collected and processed in the same way and stored for durations similar to those for the PA patients' samples. Although 4 of the 33 control subjects had slightly elevated tHcy concentrations, a not unexpected proportion in normal older people, none of the 4 had abnormal cobalamin or MMA (or holo-TC II) concentrations; similarly, the control subject with a low-normal cobalamin concentration of 189 pmol/L had normal tHcy, MMA, and holo-TC II concentrations. On the basis of cobalamin status, the 33 serum samples thus provided a satisfactory control group for holo-TC II concentrations as well as material for retesting in each assay to confirm the reproducibility of the radioimmunoassay for holo-TC II. The collection of all blood samples met the requirements of our Institutional Review Boards.
| Methods |
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Statistical analyses were performed with the assistance of Pavel Kiselev. Analysis of variance was performed by using the general linear model procedure (SAS, version 8.0; SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Because holo-TC II, the main variable of interest, showed a skewed distribution, its values were log transformed to improve the normality characteristics. Analysis of variance was applied with the SAS general linear model procedure to compare log holo-TC II means. Tukey's method was used to evaluate the statistical significance of individual pairwise comparisons. Pearson's correlations were also calculated for other data comparisons.
| RESULTS |
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Not surprisingly, holo-TC II results intermediate between those of the treated PA patients in metabolic remission and the untreated PA patients were seen in the 9 patients with treated PA whose cobalamin deficiency, because of incomplete treatment, incomplete responses, or other reasons, persisted despite treatment (Table 1
), as shown by persistently low cobalamin, elevated tHcy, or elevated MMA concentrations or a combination thereof.
Direct comparisons of holo-TC II before and after treatment
Holo-TC II findings in 4 of the 6 patients with treated PA in remission could also be compared directly with their own pretreatment concentrations (Table 2
). The initially low holo-TC II concentrations (19 pmol/L) became completely normal in all 4 patients (57130 pmol/L) when measured in sera obtained at a time remote from the last previous cobalamin injection.
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| DISCUSSION |
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The questions are complicated by the variety of possible sources of circulating holo-TC II and what determines its clearance (6). Besides the gut, which provides holo-TC II carrying both ingested and enterohepatically recycled cobalamin (12, 13), the kidney (14), and perhaps other tissues (eg, the liver) may also contribute a continuous stream of holo-TC II. Kidney and liver probably play important roles in clearance as well (14-16), and cobalamin-unrelated changes such as diseases of these or other tissues may affect holo-TC II homeostasis. For example, kidney and liver diseases are associated with elevated holo-TC II concentrations (17, 18), and decreased holo-TC II has been attributed to increased uptake by erythroid hyperplasia of the bone marrow (19). Indeed, low holo-TC II concentrations often have been noted in patients without cobalamin deficiency (10, 19). Sometimes, the tendency exists to explain isolated low holo-TC II concentrations as the earliest marker of cobalamin depletion, one that is even more sensitive than is tHcy or MMA. However, such claims are inherently unprovable, especially when so little is known about alternative explanations for low holo-TC II concentrations. The need for study of these unresolved questions with the improved assays now available led us to examine the effect, if any, of malabsorption on holo-TC II.
Our data confirmed the major influence of cobalamin status on holo-TC II, which was greatly decreased in untreated PA patients with cobalamin deficiency and became normal (>30 pmol/L) once the deficiency was corrected. The highly significant relation with metabolic status despite the persistence of malabsorption indicates that circulating holo-TC II reflects cobalamin metabolic status more closely than it does absorption status. Nevertheless, holo-TC II concentrations were also significantly lower in the patients with treated PA in metabolic remission than in healthy control subjects. The difference was small, but the data suggest that cobalamin absorption modifies serum holo-TC II concentrations to some extent, creating a subtle, complex interplay of influences. Alternative explanations for the tendency for lower concentrations in these patients than in control subjects, other than the effect of malabsorption, are nevertheless possible. These explanations include incompletely repleted cobalamin stores despite restored metabolic function, increased holo-TC II turnover due to an increased demand for cobalamin or to altered enterohepatic recirculation in PA regardless of treatment, and the possibility that some of our patients had residual metabolic deficiency that was undetected by current tests.
Despite the apparent influence of malabsorption on serum holo-TC II, the effect was not as great as was that of poor metabolic status, which produces markedly subnormal holo-TC II concentrations. No concentrations outside the normal range were apparent in the treated PA patients in metabolic remission, and overlap with control values was great. These findings, especially the overlap, rule out a practical diagnostic use for serum holo-TC II as an index of cobalamin absorption status and, certainly, as a surrogate Schilling test. Past interpretations of holo-TC II findings and conclusions based on such assumptions require reassessment.
A new and somewhat related diagnostic question must also be raised. The now apparent, albeit small, influence of absorption may compromise the frequently proposed role of holo-TC II as a reliable measurement of metabolic cobalamin status rivaling that of MMA or tHcy. The case made for low holo-TC II concentrations as the earliest marker of cobalamin deficiency owes much to studies of variably cobalamin-deficient patients who often also had PA and other forms of cobalamin malabsorption (20), including food-cobalamin malabsorption which is much more common than PA (21). It must now be reconsidered whether the mild early holo-TC II decreases observed in some studies may have reflected malabsorption rather than the earliest sign of metabolic deficiency.
Several potential limitations of our study merit comment. The number of patients, especially those with untreated PA, was relatively small because PA is uncommon and collecting highly selected samples from well-characterized patients is difficult. Nevertheless, the sample size even for the untreated patients sufficed in providing clear data resembling those reported in the literature and providing statistically significant findings. The patients with untreated PA were also not central to our hypothesis, which rested on treated PA patients. Another potential limitation was that many of the serum samples had been stored at 20 °C for periods of up to several years. The effect of such storage has not been well studied and will require retesting samples over several years. We addressed this problem in the study by selecting control sera that were subjected to storage and handling conditions that were nearly identical to those for the PA sera, thus presumably neutralizing potential but currently unknown storage and handling effects in the PA sera. Moreover, our results in control subjects and in PA patients agreed with those in the fresher samples in our laboratory as well as with existing data in the literature. Finally, it is clear that cobalamin injection has immediate, direct, but transient effects on serum holo-TC II (and total cobalamin) that can distort interpretation. No data exist on the duration and arc of this artifactual inflation of holo-TC II or the optimum time for sampling, which probably vary among individuals. However, given the measured half-life of only a few hours for holo-TC II (22), the therapy-induced artifact is probably dissipated after several days and almost certainly by 1 or 2 weeks. Sampling in our study was done several weeks after the last previous cobalamin injection to minimize the risk of such an artifact. For further assurance, sera with elevated total cobalamin concentrations were excluded from study to further avoid the risk of transient injection-induced holo-TC II artifacts.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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XC and RC were involved in the design of the study, the data collection and analysis, and the writing of the manuscript. AFR was involved in the data collection and analysis and provided advice. MPS was involved in the data collection and analysis. None of the authors had a financial interest or other conflicts of interest related to this work.
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