YÜKSEK VİTAMİN B12 DEĞERİ OLAN ÇOCUKLARIN TAKİPLERİNDEKİ TANILARIN RETROSPEKTİF İRDELENMESİ
Özet
There is no specific approach to the
importance of high serum vitamin B12 levels in children. As a result the clinicians
are worried about the subject. There are studies in the literature that associate high
serum vitamin B12 levels with an increased risk of hematological diseases and solid
tumors, liver disease, renal failure and autoinflammatory diseases. In this study, 308
patients whose vitamin B12 level was found to be above 1000 pg/ml without taking
vitamin B12 supplements when they applied to Hacettepe University Faculty of
Medicine General Pediatrics Department between 2014 and 2020 were
retrospectively examined. 157 (51%) of the patients were male and 151 (49%) were
female. The ages of the patients ranged from 44 days to 18 years, and the mean age
(Mean±SD) was 4.84±4.23 years. When the current diagnoses of the patients in our
study were examined, 178 patients had no known disease (57.8%). It was observed
that the most common complaints of the patients were cough (22.1%) and
developmental delay (12%). At the time of admission, 85 patients had fever (26.3%)
and 125 patients had signs of active infection (40.6%). Control vitamin B12 levels
were checked in 191 of the patients during their follow-up and it was observed that
49 of them (25.6%) continued to have control vitamin B12 levels above 1000 pg/ml.
19 of the patients were diagnosed with immune deficiency, seven with autoimmune
disease, six with liver disease, and one with kidney disease. Four patients had
leukemia, two patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), two patients with
chronic myeloid leukemia (CML); three patients with lymphoma; two patients were
diagnosed with solid tumors, one with an intracranial mass and one with a pituitary
adenoma. It was observed that all patients with malignancy had additional physical
examination findings and additional complaints that led to the diagnosis. No
significant difference was detected between patients whose initial diagnostic vitamin
B12 value was below and above 1500 pg/ml. There was no diagnostic difference
between patients with control vitamin B12 levels below and above 1000 pg/ml.
Vitamin B12 was not considered to be an early biomarker of hematological and
oncological diseases in pediatric patients, unlike the adult age group, since
complaints, physical examination and laboratory findings are guiding the diagnosis
in patients with malignancy accompanied with simultaneously with high vitamin B12
levels. It is thought that this study will make a significant contribution to the
literature, as there are limited studies on the follow-up of patients with high levels of
vitamin B12 in the childhood age group.