homocysteine: the subtle culprit

33
HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT Hussien H. Rizk, MD

Upload: coral

Post on 11-Jan-2016

69 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT. Hussien H. Rizk, MD. Homocysteine. A n intermediary amino acid in conversion of methionine to cysteine. Homocystinuria (severe hyperhomocysteinemia): rare autosomal recessive disorder. Severe elevations in plasma & urine homocysteine. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Hussien H. Rizk, MD

Page 2: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Homocysteine � An intermediary amino acid in conversion of

methionine to cysteine. � Homocystinuria (severe hyperhomocysteinemia): rare

autosomal recessive disorder. � Severe elevations in plasma & urine homocysteine. � Clinical manifestations: developmental delay,

osteoporosis, ocular abnormalities, thromboembolic disease, and severe premature atherosclerosis.

Page 3: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

� Less marked elevations in homocysteine are much more common, 5-7% of the population.

� Unassociated with the clinical stigmata of homocystinuria

� Moderate hyperhomocysteinemia is an independent risk factor for atherosclerotic vascular disease and recurrent venous thromboembolism

[Ueland & Refsom. J Lab Clin Med 1989; 114:473; McCully. Nat Med 1996; 2:386]..

Page 4: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

� Homocysteine is metabolized by� Transsulfuration to cysteine: catalyzed by

cystathionine-ß-synthase, needs vit. B6. � Remethylation to methionine: catalyzed by:

� methionine synthase (needs vit. B12)� betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase.

Page 5: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT
Page 6: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Causes of hyperhomocysteinemia

� Genetic enzyme defects [Andersson et al. Eur J Clin Invest 1992; 22:79] � Nutritional vit. Deficiencies [D'Angelo et al. Thromb Haemost 2000; 83:563]

� Other factors: � Chronic medical conditions (CRF)

[Mezzano et al. Thromb Haemost 1999; 81:913]

� Drugs� Methotrexate [Refsum et al. Cancer Res 1986;

46:5385]

� Trimethoprim [Smulders et al. Lancet 1998; 352:1827]

� Other: Niacin, Bile acid sequestrants

� Smoking [Bazzano et al. Ann Intern Med 2003; 138:891]

Page 7: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Thermolabile variant of MTHFR� Most common genetic hyperhomocysteinemia. � Thermolabile variant of methylene tetrahydrofolate

reductase (MTHFR), reduced activity (T mutation)

[Kang et al. Am J Hum Genet 1991; 48:536] � TT mutation in 5-14% of the population.

[Gallagher et al. Circulation 1996; 94:2154]

� Of 625 men: Prevalence of TTAll subjects 11.5%

Top 10% plasma homocysteine 36.0%

Top 5% plasma homocysteine 48.0%[Harmon et al. QJM 1996; 89:571]

Page 8: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Vitamin deficiencies� Folate & B12 are particularly strong determinants. � Homocysteine level drops with rising folate

consumption, to a plateau at intake of 400 µg/day.Robinson et al. CIrculation 1998; 97:437

Rimm et al. JAMA 1998; 279:359Voutilainen et al. Circulation 2001; 103:2674

Vermeulen et al. Lancet 2000; 355:517

� In a cohort of 1000 elderly: [Selhub et al. JAMA 1993; 270:2693]

� 2/3 of hyperhomocysteinemia: low folate, B12, or B6. � Low B12 was more common than in younger cohorts. � B12 deficiency is more important in older age. � Folate deficiency is prevalent in the general population,

particularly with alcohol consumption.

Page 9: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

FDA regulation of folic acid supplementation of grain products (1997) led to significantly higher blood folate and lower homocysteine concentrations.

Marked hyperhomocysteinemia (>13 µmol/L) was reduced by 50%

[Jacques et al. NEJM 1999; 340:1449]

Page 10: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

HOMOCYSTEINE HAS ATHERO-THROMBOTIC

PROPERTIES

� Intimal thickening� Elastic lamina disruption� Smooth muscle hypertrophy� Marked platelet accumulation� Platelet-enriched occlusive thrombi

Harker et al NEJM 1974; 291:537

Stuhlinger et al. Circulation 2001; 104:2569

Page 11: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Mechanisms of vascular injury� Promotes leukocyte recruitment & activation. � Metabolite of homocysteine aggregates with LDL and

is taken by macrophages.� Increases smooth muscle proliferation & collagen.� Free radicals (during the oxidation of homocysteine)

directly injure endothelium.� Platelet accumulation: proaggregatory effects of

homocysteine + endothelial impairment.� Prolonged exposure of endothelial cells to

homocysteine impairs the production of NO.

Page 12: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Prothrombotic mechanisms

� Attenuation of endothelial cell tPA binding� Activation of factor VIIa & V� Inhibition of protein C & heparin sulfate� Increased fibrinopeptide A & prothrombin fragments 1

and 2� Increased blood viscosity� Decreased endothelial antithrombotic activity due to

changes in thrombomodulin function [Nappo et al. JAMA 1999; 281:2113].

[Al-Obaidi et al. Circulation 2000; 101:372][Thambyrajah et al. JACC 2001; 37:1858]

Page 13: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Hyperhomocysteinemia impairs DNA methylation leading to altered gene expression (Cytosine bases, Coiling)

[van Guldener. Lancet 2003; 361:1668]

An alternate view

Page 14: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Laboratory diagnosis

� Normal concentration: 5-15 µmol/L. � Hyperhomocysteinemia classified to:

� Moderate (15-30 µmol/L)� Intermediate (30-100 µmol/L)� Severe (>100 µmol/L)

[Kang et al. Annu Rev Nutr 1992; 12:279]

� Oral methionine challenge (100 mg/kg) in ? Cases.� Homocysteine measured fasting, 4 & 8 H later. � Significance of oral methionine challenge is doubted.

Page 15: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT
Page 16: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Role in vascular disease

� Meta-analysis of 30 studies � (5073 CAD & 1113 stroke events) � After adjustment for known CVD risk factors,

a 25% lower homocysteine was associated with a lower risk of:

� CAD (OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.83-0.96) � Stroke (OR 0.81, 95% CI 0.69-

0.95)[JAMA 2002; 288:2015]

Page 17: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

TT-MTHFR & vascular events

� Meta-analysis of 40 studies � (11,162 TT-MTHFR + 12,758 matched

controls� TT genotype associated with: � 16% higher risk of CAD (95% CI 5-28%). � Increased risk of silent brain infarcts

[Klerk et al. JAMA 2002; 288:2023][Kohara et al. Stroke 2003; 34:1130]

Page 18: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Hyperhomocysteinemia linked to:� MI and other ACS [Stampfer et al. JAMA 1992; 268:877]

� Premature CAD [Schwartz et al. Circulation 1997; 96:412]

� CVD mortality [Nygard et al. NEJM 1997; 337:230] � Total mortality [Hoogeveen et al. Circulation 2000; 101:1506] � Adverse outcomes Post-PCI [Schnyder et al. JACC 2002; 40:1769]

� Carotid artery stenosis [Selhub et al. NEJM 1995; 332:286]

� Stroke [Tanne et al. Stroke 2003; 34:632] � Recurrent stroke [Boysen et al. Stroke 2003; 34:1258]

� Heart failure [Vasan et al. JAMA 2003; 289:1251]

Page 19: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Nygård, O. et. al. NEJM 1997;337:230-237

Dose-responserelationship

between plasmahomocysteine &

mortality

Page 20: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Nygård, O. et. al. NEJM 1997;337:230-237

Survival of CAD patients by plasmahomocysteine level

Page 21: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT
Page 22: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Selhub, J. et. al. NEJM 1995;332:286-291

Age-adjusted Prevalence of Maximal Extracranial Carotid Stenosis of >25%, by Quartile of plasma Homocysteine

MenWomen

Page 23: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Homocysteine level, vitamin status and CVD

Graded inverse relation of dietary folate & B6 vs CAD. � The highest quintile of intake had the greatest RRR (40%) � Intake in the lowest risk group was > 545 mcgm folate/D and > 5.9

mg B6/D (above the current RDA: 400 mcgm/D & 1.6 mg/D)

� Benefits of folate supplementation greatest in women consuming the most alcohol.

� No association between dietary B12 & CADThe Nurses' Health Study [Rimm et al. JAMA 1998; 279:359]

Page 24: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT
Page 25: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Role in venous thrombo-embolism� Meta-analyses of case-control studies: OR of 2.5-2.95

for DVT-PE with homocysteine >2 SD of the mean control value

Ray. Arch Intern Med 1998; 158:2101den Heijer et al. Thromb Haemost 1998; 80:874

den Heijer et al. NEJM1996; 334:759

Recurrent DVT more likely with hyperhomocysteinemia (18.2% vs 8.1%)

[Eichinger et al. Thromb Haemost 1998; 80:566]

Some [Ridker et al. Circulation 1997; 95:1777] but not all [De Stefano et al. Semin

Thromb Hemost 2000; 26:305] studies suggested the risk of DVT is 10-50 X with hyperhomocysteinemia + inherited thrombophilia (eg, factor V Leiden)

Page 26: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Obstetric complications

� Thermolabile MTHFR was linked to severe pre-eclampsia, abruptio placentae, fetal growth restriction, and stillbirth, which are associated with inadequate placental perfusion

[Kupferminc et al. NEJM 1999; 340:9]

� This adds to the risk of neural tube defects with folate deficiency (diet, alcohol, or antibodies to folate receptors)

Page 27: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Arguments against population screening� Dx of TT genotype of MTHFR unlikely to be cost-

effective. From prevalence (11%) & RR (1.16), the population attributable risk is 1-2% [Wilson JAMA 2002; 288:2042]

� Adequate folic acid intake reduces the impact of the TT� Benefit of lowering homocysteine on CVD & DVT

remains unproven [Stampfer & Malinow. NEJM 1995; 332:328] � Even if treatment is beneficial, it may be more cost

effective to recommend a daily multivitamin, there may be other benefits as well.

Page 28: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Lowering Homocysteine in Patients With Ischemic Stroke to Prevent Recurrent Stroke, MI, & Death

The Vitamin Intervention for Stroke Prevention (VISP) Randomized Controlled Trial

Toole et al. JAMA. 2004;291:565.

� 3680 pts, cerebral infarction, 56 centers (US, Canada, Scotland. � Randomly assigned to QD:

� high-dose (n = 1827) [25 mg B6, 0.4 mg B12, & 2.5 mg FA]� low-dose (n = 1853), [200 µg B12, 6 µg B12 & 20 µg FA].

� FU: 2Y� Results:

� Mean reduction of homocysteine: 2 µmol/L greater with high-dose.� No treatment effect on any end point.

Page 29: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Who to screen?

� Patients with premature atherosclerotic disease and absent conventional risk factors.

� Otherwise unexplained venous thrombosis. � AHA [Circulation 1999; 99:178] recommend screening in

malnutrition, malabsorption, hypothyroidism, CRF, SLE, medications ( niacin, theophylline, bile acid resins, methotrexate, L-dopa).

Page 30: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Treatment

� Hyperhomocysteinemia: � Folic acid, vitamin B12, and vitamin B6. � Diet rich in fruits, vegetables, low-fat dairy, and

low in saturated and total fat can lower homocysteine [Appel et al. Circulation 2000; 102:852]

Page 31: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

� Cardiovascular disease� Randomized trial: daily FA 1 mg + B12 400 µg + B6 10 mg. � 553 pts undergoing PCI � 29% had baseline homocysteine >12 µmol/L, � mean FU 11 m� Primary EP: death + nonfatal MI + need for repeat PCI.

Comarator Vit suppl.(%) Placebo (%)Composite EP 15.4 22.8Target lesion revascularization 9.9 16.0Death 1.5 2.8 NSNon-fatal MI 2.6 4.3 NS

[Schnyder et al. JAMA 2002; 288:973]

Page 32: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Current recommendations� Treat with premature CAD: FA (1 mg/D) + B6 (10 mg/D) + B12

(0.4 mg/D). � Always add B12 (to avoid masking pernicious anemia &

precipitating PN). � Increase dose of FA up to 5 mg/D as needed. � With homocysteine >30 µmol/L or with CRF the initial dose of

folic acid is 5 mg/D.� Normalization of the homocysteine occurs in 2 w, further

lowering occurs by 6 w [Brattstrom et al. Atherosclerosis 1990; 81:51].

� Refractory cases: trimethylglycine (750 mg bid).

Page 33: HOMOCYSTEINE: THE SUBTLE CULPRIT

Summary � Screen:

� Premature CVD without conventional risk factors � Unexplained venous thrombosis.

� Treat: � Premature CAD:

• Give a B complex vitamin. • Normalization of homocysteine expected in 2-6 w. • Increase folic acid up to 5 mg/day as needed. • With homocysteine >30 µmol/L or CRF, start folic acid at

5 mg/D.

� Adults at average risk: • Daily B complex vitamin.