Elevated methylmalonic acid, but not vitamin B12, predicts all-cause mortality in hyperlipidemic adults: a prospective cohort study
Qingtao Gong, Baiqiang Wang, Leiyang Li, Gongshuang Zhao, Chengzhi Li, Lianyue Ma, Hong Yang, Xiaojuan Zhang, Guipeng An, Chenghu Guo

TL;DR
High levels of methylmalonic acid, not vitamin B12, predict higher mortality risk in people with high cholesterol, even after adjusting for other factors.
Contribution
Methylmalonic acid is identified as a novel biomarker for mortality risk in hyperlipidemic patients, independent of vitamin B12 levels.
Findings
Each unit increase in ln-transformed MMA was linked to a 55% higher mortality risk.
Functional vitamin B12 deficiency showed the highest mortality risk (adjusted HR = 2.40).
Serum vitamin B12 alone had no significant association with mortality.
Abstract
Despite lipid-lowering therapy, patients with hyperlipidemia retain significant residual risk. This study investigated the independent and combined associations of serum methylmalonic acid (MMA), vitamin B12, and functional vitamin B12 status with all-cause mortality in this population. We analyzed data from hyperlipidemic participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) from 2011 to 2014. Weighted Cox proportional hazards models were employed to evaluate the relationships between serum MMA, vitamin B12, functional vitamin B12 deficiency (defined as elevated MMA despite normal/high B12 levels), and all-cause mortality. Nonlinear associations were examined using restricted cubic splines. During a median follow-up of 6.8 years, 626 deaths occurred. After full adjustment, each unit increase in ln-transformed MMA was associated with a 55% higher mortality risk…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFolate and B Vitamins Research · Antioxidant Activity and Oxidative Stress · Porphyrin Metabolism and Disorders
