The aim of the work-up of patients with suspected vitamin B12 deficiency is to first confirm the presence of deficiency and then to establish its most likely etiology.
Measurement of serum vitamin B12, either preceded or followed by serum methylmalonic acid measurement, is the first step in diagnosing pernicious anemia (PA). If these tests support deficiency, then intrinsic factor blocking antibody (IFBA) testing is indicated to confirm PA as the etiology. A positive IFBA test supports very strongly a diagnosis of PA. Since the diagnostic sensitivity of IFBA testing for PA is only around 50%, an indeterminate or negative IFBA test does not exclude the diagnosis of PA. In these patients, either PA or another etiology, such as malnutrition, may be present. Measurement of serum gastrin levels will help in these cases. In patients with PA, fasting serum gastrin is elevated to >200 pg/mL in an attempted compensatory response to the achlorhydria seen in this condition.