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Original Research
Levels of Vitamins and Homocysteine in Older Adults with Alzheimer Disease or Mild Cognitive Impairment in Cuba
https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2020.V22.N4.14

INTRODUCTION Age-related cognitive disorders, including Alzheimer disease, are among the main causes of disability and dependence in older adults worldwide. High blood homocysteine levels (hyperhomocysteinemia) are a risk factor for diseases whose metabolism involves different B vitamins. Antioxidant vitamins provide a protective effect by mitigating oxidative stress generated by these diseases. Epidemiological studies have presented varying results on the relationships between blood levels of these vitamins and such cognitive disorders.

OBJECTIVE Evaluate the association of vitamin and homocysteine levels with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer disease in a group of Cuban older adults.

METHODS A cross-sectional study was conducted in Havana, Cuba, of 424 persons aged ≥65 years: 43 with Alzheimer disease, 131 with mild cognitive impairment, and 250 with no signs of cognitive impairment. Dementia was diagnosed using criteria of the International 10/66 Dementia Research Group and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM IV), and mild cognitive impairment was diagnosed using Petersen’s criteria. Blood levels of vitamins (thiamine, B-2, folate, B-12, C and A) and homocysteine were measured by standard procedures. Analysis of variance for continuous variables and percentage comparison tests for dichotomous variables were used to compare groups.

RESULTS Persons with Alzheimer disease presented significantly lower levels of vitamins B-2, C and A than healthy participants (p <0.05). Homocysteine levels were significantly higher in those with Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment than in participants with no cognitive impairment (p <0.05). Statistically, levels of thiamine, folic acid, and vitamin B-12 were not significantly different across groups. Compared with those without cognitive impairment, prevalence rates (PR) in the Alzheimer group were significantly higher for hyperhomocysteinemia (PR = 3.26; 1.84–5.80) and deficiency of all B vitamins: thiamine (PR = 1.89; 1.04–3.43), B-2 (PR = 2.85; 1.54–5.26), folate (PR = 3.02; 1.53–5.95), B-12 (PR = 2.21; 1.17–4.19), vitamin C (PR = 3.88; 2.12–7.10) and A (PR = 5.47; 3.26–9.17). In mild cognitive impairment, prevalence rates were significantly higher for hyperhomocysteinemia (PR = 1.42; 1.08–1.87), vitamin B-2 deficiency (PR = 1.70; 1.24–2.32) and vitamin A deficiency (PR =1.88; 1.05–3.38).

CONCLUSIONS Hyperhomocysteinemia and various vitamin deficiencies are related to Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment. Longitudinal studies are needed to further elucidate the relationship between different nutritional biomarkers and dementia. A better understanding of this relationship could provide a basis for therapeutic and preventive strategies.

KEYWORDS Vitamins, homocysteine, geriatrics, Alzheimer disease, cognitive impairment, Cuba

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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
Age-related cognitive disorders, including Alzheimer disease, are among the main causes of disability and dependence in older adults worldwide. High blood homocysteine levels (hyperhomocysteinemia) are a risk factor for diseases whose metabolism involves different B vitamins. Antioxidant vitamins provide a protective effect by mitigating oxidative stress generated by these diseases. Epidemiological studies have presented varying results on the relationships between blood levels of these vitamins and such cognitive disorders.


OBJECTIVE Evaluate the association of vitamin and homocysteine levels with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer disease in a group of Cuban older adults.

METHODS A cross-sectional study was conducted in Havana, Cuba, of 424 persons aged ≥65 years: 43 with Alzheimer disease, 131 with mild cognitive impairment, and 250 with no signs of cognitive impairment. Dementia was diagnosed using criteria of the International 10/66 Dementia Research Group and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM IV), and mild cognitive impairment was diagnosed using Petersen’s criteria. Blood levels of vitamins (thiamine, B-2, folate, B-12, C and A) and homocysteine were measured by standard procedures. Analysis of variance for continuous variables and percentage comparison tests for dichotomous variables were used to compare groups.

RESULTS Persons with Alzheimer disease presented significantly lower levels of vitamins B-2, C and A than healthy participants (p <0.05). Homocysteine levels were significantly higher in those with Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment than in participants with no cognitive impairment (p <0.05). Statistically, levels of thiamine, folic acid, and vitamin B-12 were not significantly different across groups. Compared with those without cognitive impairment, prevalence rates (PR) in the Alzheimer group were significantly higher for hyperhomocysteinemia (PR = 3.26; 1.84–5.80) and deficiency of all B vitamins: thiamine (PR = 1.89; 1.04–3.43), B-2 (PR = 2.85; 1.54–5.26), folate (PR = 3.02; 1.53–5.95), B-12 (PR = 2.21; 1.17–4.19), vitamin C (PR = 3.88; 2.12–7.10) and A (PR = 5.47; 3.26–9.17). In mild cognitive impairment, prevalence rates were significantly higher for hyperhomocysteinemia (PR = 1.42; 1.08–1.87), vitamin B-2 deficiency (PR = 1.70; 1.24–2.32) and vitamin A deficiency (PR =1.88; 1.05–3.38).

CONCLUSIONS Hyperhomocysteinemia and various vitamin deficiencies are related to Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment. Longitudinal studies are needed to further elucidate the relationship between different nutritional biomarkers and dementia. A better understanding of this relationship could provide a basis for therapeutic and preventive strategies.

KEYWORDS Vitamins, homocysteine, geriatrics, Alzheimer disease, cognitive impairment, Cuba

INTRODUCTION
Dementia and its most common form, Alzheimer disease (AD), constitute one of the century’s main health problems due to global population aging. These conditions are among the leading causes of disability and dependence in older adults around the world, with important implications for morbidity, quality of life, healthcare costs and mortality.[1,2] WHO estimated that some 50 million people suffered dementia in 2019 and that this figure will reach 82 million by 2030, and 152 million by 2050.[1]

AD is characterized by progressive decline of cognitive functions and irreversible loss of neurons and their synapses, especially in the structures responsible for memory: the hippocampus and the cerebral cortex.[2] An estimated 170,000 Cubans suffered from dementia in 2019, and it is estimated that this figure will have a 76% increase and reach 300,000 cases by 2040.[3] In recent years, dementia and AD taken together have been the sixth leading cause of death in Cuba for both sexes.[4,5]

IMPORTANCE
This is the first study in Cuba to examine vitamin and homocysteine levels in older adults with Alzheimer disease or mild cognitive impairment, and results show a relationship between these nutritional indicators and the cognitive disorders.

Another cognitive disorder of interest is mild cognitive impairment (MCI), considered the gateway to dementia (proportion of conversion to dementia is 10%–15% of MCI persons annually).[6] AD is an illness with multi-source etiology involving various factors, both genetic and environmental. From 1% to 5% of cases are hereditary. Risk factors include age (it is more common after age 65), sex (more commonly affects women), low educational and employment levels, depression, smoking, and genetic presence of the apolipoprotein epsilon 4 allele (APOEε4), especially in the case of homozygosity. Vascular risk factors (including hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia and obesity), heart disease, and stroke at mid-life increase the risk of vascular dementia and Alzheimer disease, while physical activity and healthy diet are protective factors.[2,7,8]

Homocysteine (Hcy) is a sulfur-containing amino acid that plays a crucial role in transfer of methyl groups in cellular metabolism. Its high levels present a risk factor for heart disease and stroke. In systematic reviews and meta-analyses of relevant epidemiological studies (mostly prospective and case–control), high plasma levels of Hcy represent a modifiable risk factor for cognitive dysfunction and AD.[9–11]

The B-group vitamins (B-2, B-6, folic acid, B-12) are involved in Hcy metabolism. Deficiencies in folate and vitamin B-12 (and to a lesser degree vitamin B-6) are associated with increased homocysteine levels in plasma; it has even been proposed that hyperhomocysteinemia be used as an indicator of these vitamin deficiencies.[10–13] Folic acid and vitamin B-12 intervene in cognitive activity through other functions. Folate deficiency affects synthesis of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA, causing neuronal deterioration and cellular death in areas of the brain involved in AD; this deficiency can lead to hypomethylation in regions that modulate expressions of genes presumably involved in AD pathogenesis.[14,15] Vitamin B-12 also acts as a cofactor in the enzyme methylmalonyl-CoA mutase, and B-12 deficiency affects synthesis of fatty acids and can lead to cognitive impairment.[16]

Several epidemiological studies have examined the relation of B vitamins and antioxidant levels with cognitive function and AD risk, but results are inconclusive.[8,16,17]

In 2000, vitamin B deficiencies were found in Cuba’s older adult population.[18] Some older adults’ infrequent consumption of foods including proteins, vegetables, fruit and other poor dietary habits[19] may cause these deficiencies and may be related to their cognitive disorders. Our study’s hypothesis is that vitamin deficiencies and Hcy are associated with cognitive impairment. This research aims to evaluate the relationship of homocysteine and vitamin levels with MCI and AD in older Cuban adults.

METHODS
Type of study and participants An analytical cross-sectional study was conducted in a randomly selected sub-sample of 174 individuals with cognitive impairment (131 with MCI and 43 with AD) and 250 individuals with no cognitive impairment from the prospective longitudinal Aging and Alzheimer Study. The Aging and Alzheimer Study launched in 2003 by the Medical University of Havana’s Alzheimer Research Group, studied the disease in Cuban adults aged ≥65 years. The participants reside in four health areas in Havana: Marianao (in the 27 de Noviembre and Carlos Manuel Portuondo Polyclinics), Lisa (Cristóbal Labra Polyclinic), 10 de Octubre (14 de Junio Polyclinic) and Playa (Ana Betancourt Polyclinic). Participants were recruited through family physicians in the respective health areas and the Cuban 10/66 Dementia Research Group. Clinical and biochemical evaluations were done for all 424 participants. Evaluators did not know the subjects’ MCI or AD status.[20,21]

Inclusion criteria Older adults who gave their written consent to participate.

Exclusion criteria Presentation of the following disorders: intestinal malabsorption, cancer, hepatic diseases, chronic kidney disease, decompensated diabetes mellitus or any other condition indicating cognitive impairment such as epilepsy, psychiatric disorders of the psychotic type or intellectual disability, cranial fracture, encephalic vascular event (thrombosis, ischemia, stroke) or other type of dementia.

Variables Table 1 presents a summary of variables.

Clinical evaluation for MCI and AD diagnosis We used the tools developed by the Cuban 10/66 Dementia Research Group, including a questionnaire on sociodemographic features, health status, lifestyle and risk factors.[20] Dementia was diagnosed using the international 10/66 criteria and algorithm, validated in 26 countries (including Cuba),[20] which includes:

  • Clinical interview structured on the study participant’s mental state analyzed through a computerized algorithm (AGECAT)[22]
  • Interview with a reliable informant (CSI-D RELSCORE)[23]
  • Community dementia screening tool (CSI-D COGSCORE)[23]
  • Test for verbal fluency and repetition of CERAD modified-words list (10 words)[24]
  • Additional information on early dementia and its development according to information provided by the 10/66 dementia diagnostic algorithm, its sub-types, history and etiology[25]

DSM-IV criteria[26] of the American Psychiatric Association were also used to diagnose dementia. MCI was diagnosed using Petersen’s criteria.[27]

Clinical evaluations were conducted by medical specialists in the Medical University of Havana’s Alzheimer Research Group, who received prior training based on earlier studies. Evaluation results were used to classify participants in three groups: those with MCI, persons with AD, and those with no cognitive impairment.

Biochemical evaluation Samples of approximately 20 mL of blood were extracted intravenously after fasting; one aliquot was collected without anticoagulant and one aliquot in tubes containing ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA). Table 1 presents the cutoff points used for the different biochemical variables. All techniques were performed in compliance with the respective quality control standards.

A volume of 0.5 mL of plasma plus anticoagulant was treated with an equal volume of metaphosphoric acid and frozen to –80 °C for determination of vitamin C by spectrophotometry.[30] Other aliquots of plasma were used to quantify homocysteine through the enzymatic oxidation of NADH to NAD+,[29] with a commercial diagnostic kit C02257/3 (C.P.M. Diagnostic Research SAS, Italy). Vitamin A was quantified in an aliquot of plasma by high-resolution liquid chromatography.[31]

Vitamin B-2 levels were calculated by stimulating the enzyme glutathione reductase in erythrocytes obtained after plasma separation.[32] Vitamin B-1 and B-2 levels were measured by determining the effect of thiamine pyrophosphate[33] and the activation coefficient of the enzyme glutathione reductase through the activities of transketolase and erythrocyte glutathione reductase activity coefficient (EGRAC)[32] respectively; these enzymes are indirect indicators of the availability of circulating vitamins since enzymatic activity increases due to deficiency in levels of both vitamins.

Serum obtained by centrifuging the blood without anticoagulant was conserved at –20 °C. Quantification of serum folate and vitamin B-12[34] was determined through electrochemiluminescence immunoassay using commercial diagnostic kits (Roche Diagnostics Gmb, Germany)

Due to insufficient sample volume, we quantified serum folate, B-12 and thiamine in 92% of the samples; vitamin B-2 in 89%; vitamin C in 91%; homocysteine in 90%; and vitamin A in 81% of the samples.

Ethical considerations The study’s protocol was approved by the Scientific Council and Research Ethics Committee of the National Hygiene, Epidemiology and Microbiology Institute and the Medical University of Havana. The study was conducted in accordance with the World Medical Association’s Declaration of Helsinki and its ethical principles for medical research involving human subjects.[35] The scientific and social features and importance were explained to all participants and family members representing them, and their oral and written consent was obtained. In the case of older adults unable to give their consent, approval was sought from the family member responsible for their care.

Data processing and analysis Means and standard deviations were calculated to describe quantifiable variables and absolute frequencies and percentages for qualitative variables. An analysis of covariance was applied to identify the main or interactive effects of covariables (age and family history of dementia, which differed across groups) on vitamin means; none were determined to be significant (p >0.05).

To compare the three groups (AD, MCI, and without cognitive impairment), a one-way analysis of variance was conducted, with a posteriori tests to identify different groups using parametric tests or their non-parametric alternatives depending on whether they met the assumptions of group normality and homoscedasticity. A significance level of p = 0.05 was adopted. The test of homogeneity between groups was applied to the biochemical variables. The Pearson correlation was calculated as a measure of linear association of homocysteine levels with folate, vitamins B-12 and B-2. The prevalence of hyperhomocysteinemia was calculated as well as the prevalence of vitamin deficiencies, taking as reference the group with no cognitive impairment (with confidence intervals estimated at 95%). The statistical procedure used SPSS Statistics version 20 software (IBM, USA).

RESULTS
The average age was 78 years old in the group with no cognitive impairment, 79.5 in the MCI group and 82.8 in the AD group.

Other sociodemographic and clinical features were similar across groups, except family history of dementia, which was more common in the groups with cognitive disorders. In all three groups, 60% of participants had a low education level (elementary school only), 47% were smokers or ex-smokers, only 3% drank alcohol, 73% had hypertension and 52% had altered glucose (Table 2).

Hcy levels varied notably across groups. The highest levels were found in the AD group and MCI group. Only those with AD had notably lower levels of vitamins C, A, and B-12. No differences were found across the groups in levels of thiamine (B-1), folate and vitamin B-12. Vitamins B-1 and B-2 levels were lower in the most severe cases of AD and MCI. The average vitamin C level was lower in the AD group than in the MCI group (Table 3).

The prevalence of vitamin deficiency in B-2, folate, C, A and hyperhomocysteinemia were significantly more common in individuals with AD than in individuals with no cognitive impairment. Vitamins B-1 and B-12 deficiencies showed the same pattern but were not statistically significant (Table 4).

For all biochemical markers, prevalence rates were higher than one and notably higher in the AD group than in the MCI group, with the exception of folate (Table 5).

DISCUSSION
The B vitamins (B-2, B-6, folic acid, B-12) are involved in Hcy metabolism. High levels of this compound are considered a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, stroke, and more recently, Alzheimer disease and vascular dementia. Deficiency of B-group vitamins, the leading cause of hyperhomocysteinemia in older adults, is influenced mainly by diet.[11–13,36]

This study confirmed that Hcy levels were significantly higher in individuals with AD and MCI and that hyperhomocysteinemia was more common in MCI and AD than in participants with no cognitive impairment. High Hcy levels are associated with cognitive impairment and AD.[10–13,36] In 17 of the 19 cohort studies included in a systematic review that evaluated the relationship between Hcy levels and AD risk, a significant association was found.[10] A meta-analysis of 68 studies confirmed that persons with AD had higher levels of Hcy than those without cognitive impairment, suggesting that higher Hcy levels could be an AD risk factor.[11]

Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain the relation between Hcy and AD, including demethylation, cerebrovascular damage, oxidative stress and high levels of the ß‑amyloid peptide.[9,12,36,37] Deficiencies of the vitamin B group can lead to insufficient methylation of Hcy and therefore, reduced synthesis of methionine and S-adenosylmethionine. This in turn can lead to a shortage of methyl groups that are essential for the synthesis of nucleic acids, proteins, neurotransmitters, membrane phospholipids and for metabolism of myelin, which could affect reduction of neurocognitive function.[8,9,38]

Excess Hcy has a detrimental effect on blood vessel walls, since the oxidation of its sulfhydryl group generates potential reactive forms, such as superoxide anions, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl anion, which can cause endothelial damage. The endothelial cells reduce synthesis of nitric oxide, leading to vasoconstriction and increased platelet stickiness, lipoprotein oxidation and with that, increased LDL deposits on arterial walls, activation of the coagulation cascade and limitation of blood flow, resulting in thrombosis and neuronal death.[9,12]

High Hcy levels reportedly can have a neurotoxic effect by stimulating the glutamate receptor that induces increased calcium flow to the cell’s interior. As a result, neuronal toxicity from oxidative stress is amplified, leading finally to apoptosis.[9,12,37]

The increased content of oxygen radicals due to high Hcy levels can also lead to hydrolysis of the precursor protein amyloid, increased generation of the β‑amyloid peptide, and formation of amyloid plaques in the neurons (one of the main characteristics of Alzheimer disease).[8,32]

Independent of high Hcy levels, folic acid and vitamin B-12 also contribute to cognitive function.[14–16] Folate deficiency affects nuclear and mitochondrial DNA synthesis due to lack of methylation of purines, and impedes transformation of uracil into thymine, causing oxidative stress and generation of reactive oxygen species, followed by neuronal deterioration and cellular death in areas of the brain involved in AD.[14,15] Folate deficiency can also cause hypomethylation of regions that modulate expression of genes presumably involved in AD pathogenesis.[14,15] In addition, vitamin B-12 is a cofactor of the enzyme methylmalonyl‑CoA mutase; deficiency of this vitamin causes inactivation of the enzyme and accumulation of methylmalonyl‑CoA, affecting fatty-acid synthesis. Cognitive impairment results from accumulation of abnormal fatty acids in neural tissue membranes.[16]

Results of several authors vary with respect to these vitamin levels in older adults with and without AD. A 30-study meta-analysis showed that plasma levels of these vitamins were significantly lower in persons with AD.[39] Another meta-analysis (of 68 studies) found that those with AD had higher homocysteine levels and lower serum folate and vitamin B-12 levels in plasma than those found in persons without AD.[11] In line with our study, two other cross-sectional studies did not find significant differences in average serum folate and vitamin B-12 levels across the groups.[40,41]

We found that serum folate and Vitamin B-12 deficiencies were more prevalent in the AD group, similar to several other epidemiological studies.[13,42,43]

Although some studies (particularly those using a cross-sectional design) have shown association, and despite the large number of cohort studies, there is still insufficient evidence to conclude an association between folate or vitamin B-12 levels and risk of cognitive impairment and dementia, as shown in the differing results in the literature.[8,11,16] This is likely due to a variety of different study designs in terms of sample size, duration, lack of control for confounding variables and use of more specific biological markers, among other factors.

Vitamin B-2 plays a crucial role. Its co-enzymatic form (flavin-adenine dinucleotide, FAD) acts as a co-factor of the enzyme methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase, which metabolizes the folate participating in Hcy methylation.[8,9] A South Korean study in elders divided into three groups (normal individuals, those with MCI and those with AD) found that Hcy levels were inversely proportional to intake of vitamins B-2, B-6, B-12 and folate. Among AD subjects, those with higher vitamin intake presented better results on several tests: the Mini-Mental State Examination-KC, CERAD-K Consortium (MMSE‑KC), Boston Naming Test, Word Fluency, Word List Memory Test and Constructional Recall Test.[44] In the MCI group, those with higher vitamin B-2 intake presented better results on the MMSE‑KC and Boston Naming tests.[44] These results show that vitamin B-2 is important in cognitive function.

In our research, vitamin B-1 levels were lower in individuals with MCI and even lower in those with AD. Although differences in B-1 levels across groups were not significant, individuals with AD showed greater prevalence of B-1 deficiency.

Vitamin B-1 apparently plays a role in AD pathogenesis.[45,46] AD patients reportedly have lower vitamin B-1 levels in plasma and reduced vitamin‑B‑dependent activity of enzymes α‑ketoglutarate dehydrogenase and α‑transketolase in their brains and peripheral tissue.[45,46] In rats with vitamin B-1 deficiency, accumulation of the amyloid precursor protein has been observed in damaged brain regions; this provokes accumulation of the β‑amyloid peptide that forms amyloid plaques, the main cause of neuronal death.[45]

Vitamin B-1 requires synthesis of acetylcholine, the neurotransmitter most commonly deficient in AD. Reduced acetylcholine synthesis has been observed in brains of rats with vitamin B-1 deficiency.[44] Multiple events are associated with vitamin B-1 deficiency. One of these is reduced activity of α‑ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, which leads to an energy deficit due to deterioration of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and reduced ATP synthesis, in addition to decreased activity of the Na+/K+–ATPase, resulting in high toxicity, activation of glutamate receptor, calcium input, and finally, neuronal death.[46]

Findings show that vitamin B-1 deficiency is tied to neuro-inflammation, which plays a key role in AD pathogenesis. When B-1 supply is deficient, reports indicate morphological glial-cell alterations, including swelling and appearance of phagocytic vacuoles; proinflammatory cytokines are also produced in vulnerable and non-vulnerable regions of the brain.[45] In animals with vitamin B-1 deficiency, increased reactive oxygen species, induction of the endothelial isoform of nitric oxide synthase and changes in superoxide dismutase levels have all been reported.[45]

Our study’s results also show that plasma levels of antioxidant vitamins C and A were significantly lower in the AD group than in those with no cognitive impairment. Vitamin A deficiency was much more common in individuals with MCI—and especially those with AD— than in those with no cognitive impairment, while vitamin C deficiency occurred in individuals with AD. A meta-analysis of studies on eight vitamins showed that persons with AD had significantly lower levels of vitamin C, E and A than those without cognitive impairment.[39] A cross-sectional study of older adults in Germany found significantly lower levels of vitamin C and β‑carotene in individuals with dementia than in the healthy individuals.[17] Another more recent meta-analysis of studies on vitamin levels in cerebrospinal fluid showed that persons with AD had significantly lower vitamin C, E, folate and B-12 levels.[47]

Other findings in studies on rats show that vitamin C reduces generation of the β-amyloid peptide and acetylcholinesterase activity. Vitamin C prevents endothelial impairment, one of the main factors in AD pathogenesis and progression.[48]

Recent in vitro studies have shown that vitamin A (retinol, retinal and retinoic acid) and the β‑carotene provitamin inhibit the formation, extension and destabilization of β‑amyloid peptide fibrils. Vitamin A and β‑carotene in vitro have an inhibitory effect on oligomerization of the two main types of the β‑amyloid peptide, Aβ40 and Aβ42 (the last one is prominent in the brains of individuals with AD).[49]

In cognitive disorders, availability of antioxidant vitamins decreases, due to oxidative stress. Neural membranes are a potential target for oxidative stress damage due to their high content of polyunsaturated fatty acids vulnerable to oxidation. Lipid peroxidation can alter the membrane’s composition, which is evident in Alzheimer disease. Vitamins A, C and E serve as antioxidants to protect lipid precursors and membrane components against lipid peroxidation. In AD, the need for vitamins increases in order to compensate for their increased use.[39,47]

In this study, low levels of vitamins B-2, C and A were found in patients with AD and MCI, in line with results from other authors.[10,11,39,47] It is not possible to infer causation in these associations or even potential reciprocal causation: that is, dementia as a factor that promotes poor nutritional intake, or, inversely, the process of dementia as a result of reduced nutritional intake in older adults.[39]

One study limitation is that its cross-sectional design does not allow chronological ordering of events to be established, or, as a result, whether the nutritional indicators associated with MCI and AD can be determined to be the cause of the disease or merely a consequence of it. Due to limited resources, more specific biological markers were not used. The study’s results are important because this is the first time cognitive disorders in older Cubans have been studied in relation to vitamin deficiency and hyperhomocysteinemia. Longitudinal studies are needed to further understand the relationship between different nutritional biomarkers and dementia.

CONCLUSIONS
The association of certain vitamin deficiencies and hyperhomocysteinemia with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer disease was confirmed in older adults in Cuba. Both these results and a range of epidemiological evidence support the close relationship between nutrition and AD in Cuba’s older adult population.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We want to thank Dr Josanne Soto Matos of the Hermanos Ameijeiras Clinical-Surgical Teaching Hospital for her quantification of folic acid and vitamin B-12.

FINANCING
The study received financing from Cuba’s Ministry of Public Health and the Aging and Alzheimer Project (10/66 study), the latter a collaboration between the Medical University of Havana and the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neurosciences of King’s College, London, financed by Welcome Trust (GR066133) and Cuba’s Ministry of Public Health.

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THE AUTHORS

Yeneisy Lanyau-Domínguez (Corresponding author: ylanyau@infomed.sld.cu, yeneisy@inhem.sld.cu), biochemist with a master’s degree in nutrition sciences and public health, and a doctorate in health sciences. Associate researcher, Biochemistry and Physiology Department, Nutrition and Food Hygiene Center (CNHA) of the National Hygiene, Epidemiology and Microbiology Institute (INHEM), Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1900-9852

Consuelo Macías-Matos, biochemist with a master’s degree in nutrition sciences and public health, and a doctorate in chemistry. Senior researcher, Biochemistry and Physiology Department, CNHA, INHEM, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0241-7294

Juan de Jesús Llibre-Rodríguez, internist with a doctorate in medical sciences and a higher doctorate in science. Full professor and senior researcher, Alzheimer Research Center, Finlay Albarrán Faculty of Medicine, Medical University of Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8215-3160

Gisela María Pita-Rodríguez, physician specializing in clinical biochemistry with a master’s degree in environmental health. Associate researcher and associate professor, Biochemistry and Physiology Department, CNHA, INHEM, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5590-2461

Ramón Suárez-Medina, physician specializing in biostatistics. Associate researcher and associate professor, Epidemiology and Environmental Health Department, INHEM, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5311-5237

María Eugenia Quintero-Alejo, laboratory technician, Biochemistry and Physiology Department, CNHA, INHEM, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1093-6035

Lisseth Noriega-Fernández, psychiatrist with a master’s degree in healthy longevity. Instructor, Marianao Community Mental Health Center, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3560-8625

Milagros Guerra-Hernández, psychiatrist with a master’s degree in healthy longevity. Assistant professor, 27 de Noviembre Polyclinic, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6835-1742

Marina Calvo-Rodríguez, psychiatrist with a master’s degree in health psychology. Instructor, La Lisa Community Health Center, Havana, Cuba.

Yvón Sánchez-Gil, psychiatrist with a master’s degree in longevity studies. Assistant professor, Ana Betancourt Polyclinic, Havana, Cuba.

Milagros García-Klibanski, psychiatrist with a master’s in social psychiatry. Full professor, Luyanó Polyclinic, Havana, Cuba.

Dania Herrera-Javier, laboratory technician, Biochemistry and Physiology Department, CNHA, INHEM, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0245-0879

Caridad Arocha-Oriol, laboratory technician, Biochemistry and Physiology Department, CNHA, INHEM, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5519-4592

Maybe Díaz-Domínguez, laboratory technician, Biochemistry and Physiology Department, CNHA, INHEM, Havana, Cuba. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3199-2407

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Submitted: June 26, 2020
Approved: September 09, 2020
Disclosures: None

Lanyau-Domínguez Y, Macías-Matos C, Llibre-Rodríguez JJ, Pita-Rodríguez GM, Suárez-Medina R, Quintero-Alejo ME, et al. Levels of vitamins and homocysteine in older adults with Alzheimer disease or mild cognitive impairment in Cuba. MEDICC Rev. 2020 Oct;22(4):40–7. Available at: https://mediccreview.org/levels-of-vitamins-and-homocysteine-in-older-adults-with-alzheimer-disease-or-mild-cognitive-impairment-in-cuba

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