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Folic Acid and Pregnancy

NICE guideline [NG247] Maternal and child nutrition: nutrition and weight management in pregnancy, and nutrition in children up to 5 years. Published: Jan 2025.

NICE CKS Pre-conception – advice and management: Scenarior: Pre-conception advice for all women. Last revised: Jun 2025.

Background Information

Folic Acid

Folic acid (vitamin B9) is essential for DNA synthesis and cell division, making it critical during periods of rapid cell growth such as early pregnancy.

Importance in Pregnancy

Folic acid is required for normal neural tube development, which forms the brain and spinal cord.

Deficiency increases the risk of neural tube defects, including:

  • Spina bifida
  • Anencephaly
  • Encephalocele

Overview of Pregnancy and Supplements

NICE recommends taking the Healthy Start vitamins (free supplements provided by the NHS to eligible pregnant women) that contain:

  • Folic acid 400 micrograms
  • Vitamin C 70mg
  • Vitamin D 400 IU

Vitamin A supplementation is not recommended during pregnancy.

Pregnant women should avoid:

  • Taking supplements containing vitamin A (retinol)
  • Eating liver or liver products (as they contain high levels of vitamin A)

Excess vitamin A during pregnancy has potential teratogenic effects.

Folic Acid and Pregnancy

When To Start Taking

Advise ALL women who are planning pregnancy to start taking folic acid BEFORE conception (i.e. before attempting to get pregnant).

If the woman is already pregnant and is NOT taking folic acid → advise to start taking folic acid ASAP

Rationale for pre-conception folic acid

Folic acid should be started before conception to reduce the risk of neural tube defects

  • The neural tube closes by ~4 weeks of gestation and this is often before pregnancy is recognised (many people do not realise they are pregnant immediately and may test days to weeks later)
  • Starting folic acid only after a positive pregnancy test may be too late to prevent neural tube defects.

It is important to still take folic acid supplements even if food (including flour) is fortified with folic acid.

Duration

Folic acid should be taken from whenever started (ideally pre-conception) until 12 weeks of pregnancy

Dosage (IMPORTANT)

Type Folic acid dosage Indications
Standard dose 400 micrograms daily Most women, if high-dose folic acid is NOT indicated
High-dose 5 mg daily Those at increased risk of having a baby with neural tube defect or other congenital malformation.

ANY of the following:

  • Partner with neural tube defect (e.g. spina bifida)
  • Personal family history of neural tube defect
  • Previous pregnancy with a neural tube defect
  • Diabetes (1 or 2)
  • Sickle cell anaemia
  • Thalassaemia
  • Those who take anti-epileptics (e.g. sodium valproate)
  • Those who take HIV medications

Overweight / obesity is no longer an indication to take high-dose folic acid.

NICE: Reassure anyone with a body mass index (BMI) of 25 kg/m2 or more who is planning to become pregnant or is in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy that they do not need to take more than 400 micrograms of folic acid a day, unless they have any of the factors listed in recommendation 1.1.5.

Important NOT to mix up doses of folic acid:

  • Standard dose is 400 MICROGRAMS (mcg) – not milligrams (mg)!
  • High-dose is 5 MILLIGRAMS (mg)

References


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