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Vitamin B₁₂ status, cognitive decline and dementia: a systematic review of prospective cohort studies.

Fiona O'Leary, Margaret Allman-Farinelli, Samir Samman
Systematic Review The British journal of nutrition 2012 87 اقتباسات
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

نوع الدراسة
Systematic Review
المجتمع المدروس
Older adults in prospective cohort studies
التدخل
Vitamin B₁₂ status, cognitive decline and dementia: a systematic review of prospective cohort studies. None
المقارن
None
النتيجة الأولية
Vitamin B12 status association with cognitive decline/dementia
اتجاه التأثير
Mixed
خطر التحيز
Moderate

Abstract

Poor vitamin B₁₂ status may lead to the development of cognitive decline and dementia but there is a large variation in the quality, design of and results reported from these investigations. We have undertaken a systematic review of the evidence for the association between vitamin B₁₂ status and cognitive decline in older adults. A database search of the literature to 2011 was undertaken, using keywords related to vitamin B₁₂ and cognition. All prospective cohort studies assessing the association of serum vitamin B₁₂ or biomarkers were included. Quality assessment and extraction of the data were undertaken by two researchers. The quality assessment tool assigns a positive, neutral or negative rating. Of 3772 published articles, thirty-five cohort studies (n 14 325 subjects) were identified and evaluated. No association between serum vitamin B₁₂ concentrations and cognitive decline or dementia was found. However, four studies that used newer biomarkers of vitamin B₁₂ status (methylmalonic acid and holotranscobalamin (holoTC)) showed associations between poor vitamin B₁₂ status and the increased risk of cognitive decline or dementia diagnosis. In general, the studies were of reasonable quality (twenty-one positive, ten neutral and four negative quality) but of short duration and inadequate subject numbers to determine whether an effect exists. Future studies should be of adequate duration (at least 6 years), recruit subjects from the seventh decade, choose markers of vitamin B₁₂ status with adequate specificity such as holoTC and/or methylmalonic acid and employ standardised neurocognitive assessment tools and not screening tests in order to ascertain any relationship between vitamin B₁₂ status and cognitive decline.

باختصار

Future studies should be of adequate duration, recruit subjects from the seventh decade, choose markers of vitamin B12 status with adequate specificity such as holoTC and/or methylmalonic acid and employ standardised neurocognitive assessment tools and not screening tests in order to ascertain any relationship between vitamin B 12 status and cognitive decline.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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