High doses of folic acid induce a pseudo-methylenetetrahydrofolate syndrome

  • Cornet D
  • Clement A
  • Clement P
  • et al.
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Abstract

A 41-year-old Caucasian woman with a history of infertility dating from 2011 was identified as wild-type (no mutations) for methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase single nucleotide polymorphisms (MTHFR-SNPs). Previous treatment included three failed in vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection cycles as well as one failed cycle of in vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection with donated oocytes. Counseling for a further oocyte donation cycle included advice to take high doses of folic acid (5 mG per day). Prior to initiation of this cycle, in October 2017 she attended our unit for general gynecological assessment and was found to have a slightly increased level of homocysteine, 12.2 µmol/L. A further test in February 2018 showed an increase to 17.2 µmol/L. Folic acid was stopped, and she was treated with 5-MTHF (500 µG daily), which supports the one-carbon cycle. After 5 days of treatment, her homocysteine level dropped to a baseline level of 8.2 µmol/L. As previously described in mice, high doses of folic acid can induce a “pseudo MTHFR” syndrome in wild-type patients, leading to an elevated unmetabolized folic acid syndrome which results in increased serum levels of homocysteine.

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Cornet, D., Clement, A., Clement, P., & Menezo, Y. (2019). High doses of folic acid induce a pseudo-methylenetetrahydrofolate syndrome. SAGE Open Medical Case Reports, 7, 2050313X1985043. https://doi.org/10.1177/2050313x19850435

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