4.6 Article

Long-term Metformin Therapy and Monitoring for Vitamin B12 Deficiency Among Older Veterans

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 65, Issue 5, Pages 1061-1066

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.14761

Keywords

aging; metformin; type 2 diabetes; veterans; vitamin B12

Funding

  1. Department of Veterans Affairs Birmingham/Atlanta Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center
  2. Veterans Health Administration Career Development Award [CDA-2, 1 IK2 RX000747-01]
  3. Federal Drug Administration (FDA) [RO1FD003527]
  4. Veterans Affairs Health Services Research & Development Investigator-Initiated Research (VA HSRD IIR) [07-138]
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R21DK099716, DK066204, P30DK111024, U01 DK091958, U01 DK098246]
  6. Cystic Fibrosis Foundation award [PHILLI12A0]

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ObjectiveTo examine the association between long-term metformin therapy and serum vitamin B12 monitoring. DesignRetrospective cohort study. SettingA single Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VAMC), 2002-2012. ParticipantsVeterans 50 years or older with either type 2 diabetes and long-term metformin therapy (n = 3,687) or without diabetes and no prescription for metformin (n = 13,258). MeasurementsWe determined diabetes status from outpatient visits, and defined long-term metformin therapy as a prescription 500 mg/d for at least six consecutive months. We estimated the proportion of participants who received a serum B12 test and used multivariable logistic regression, stratified by age, to evaluate the association between metformin use and serum B12 testing. ResultsOnly 37% of older adults with diabetes receiving metformin were tested for vitamin B12 status after long-term metformin prescription. The mean B12 concentration was significantly lower in the metformin-exposed group (439.2 pg/dL) compared to those without diabetes (522.4 pg/dL) (P = .0015). About 7% of persons with diabetes receiving metformin were vitamin B12 deficient (<170 pg/dL) compared to 3% of persons without diabetes or metformin use (P = .0001). Depending on their age, metformin users were two to three times more likely not to receive vitamin B12 testing compared to those without metformin exposure, after adjusting for sex, race and ethnicity, body mass index, and number of years treated at the VAMC. ConclusionLong-term metformin therapy is significantly associated with lower serum vitamin B12 concentration, yet those at risk are often not monitored for B12 deficiency. Because metformin is first line therapy for type 2 diabetes, clinical decision support should be considered to promote serum B12 monitoring among long-term metformin users for timely identification of the potential need for B12 replacement.

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