Abstract

Vitamin B12 absorption was measured in 30 patients with cystic fibrosis by means of the urinary excretion method and found to be impaired, i.e. less than 10%, in 25. The mean urinary excretion amounted to 4.7 +/- 0.8%. In all patients vitamin B12 absorption improved by the addition of trypsin (18.9 +/- 2.1%). Addition of the vitamin B12 analogue cobinamide, which prevents vitamin B12-binding by R-binders, raised the vitamin B12 absorption to 15.0 +/- 2.2%. A further improvement was obtained by the simultaneous addition of cobinamide and trypsin, 18.2 +/- 2.6%, the same value as with trypsin alone. Assuming that cobinamide addition was effective in suppressing all R-binder activity, the additional effect of trypsin suggests a second, stimulatory function of trypsin on vitamin B12 absorption, separate from R-binder-inactivation. In 5 patients only marginal improvement of vitamin B12 absorption was gained by the addition of either trypsin or cobinamide. The deficient serum vitamin B12 (110 pmol/l) in one of them indicates that the normal pancreas-substitution therapy not always implies sufficient restoration of vitamin B12 absorption.

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