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Journal of Nutrition Vol. 123 No. 2 February 1993, pp. 197-203
Copyright © 1993 by American Society for Nutrition
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Periconceptional Vitamin Profiles Are Not Suitable for Identifying Women at Risk for Neural Tube Defects1

Pim N. M. Mooij, Régine P. M. Steegers-Theunissen, Chris M. G. Thomas, Wim H. Doesburg* and Tom K.A.B. Eskes

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology * Department of Medical Statistics, University Hospital, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Folic acid and other vitamin deficiencies may play a role in the etiology of neural tube defects. The Medical Research Council Vitamin Study confirmed the beneficial effect of folic acid supplementation on the prevention of neural tube defects. However, the concentrations of vitamins other than folate were not a common feature of any of the former studies. We measured the concentrations of vitamin A, riboflavin, riboflavine-5'-monophosphate, flavine-adenine-dinucleotide, vitamin B-6, vitamin B-12, vitamin C, vitamin E, folate and ferritin in the serum of women who had previously had a child with a neural tube defect and were planning a further pregnancy. Vitamin and folic acid supplements were supplied before conception to 44 high risk women before conception. Eighteen other high risk women not given supplements were the control group. We concluded that vitamin profiles do not form a suitable means for identifying women at risk for neural tube defects before pregnancy. This endorses the hypothesis that the beneficial effect of folic acid supplementation on the prevention of neural tube defects is possibly at least partly due to the fact that it overrides a relative folic acid shortage caused by a metabolic disorder.


KEY WORDS: • vitamin profiles • humans • neural tube defects • supplementation

1 Supported by a grant from the Dutch Praeventiefonds (no. 28.1006).

Manuscript received 22 June 1992. Revision accepted 5 October 1992.




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