I suppose this ties in, arguably, with the other article I posted about the $2.5 billion spent on alternative medicines. This is one I'm really keen on though. To be honest, I'm kind of hoping they turn out to be useful treatments, rooting for them as it were.Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
Study will see if either supplement lowers risk of cancer, heart disease
The Associated Press
updated 1:21 p.m. CT, Mon., June 22, 2009
Two of the most popular and promising dietary supplements — vitamin D and fish oil — will be tested in a large, government-sponsored study to see whether either nutrient can lower a healthy person's risk of getting cancer, heart disease or having a stroke.
The study will be one of the first big nutrition experiments ever to target a specific racial group — blacks, who will comprise one quarter of the participants.
People with dark skin are unable to make much vitamin D from sunlight, and researchers think this deficiency may help explain why blacks have higher rates of cancer, stroke and heart disease.
"If something as simple as taking a vitamin D pill could help lower these risks and eliminate these health disparities, that would be extraordinarily exciting," said Dr. JoAnn Manson. She and Dr. Julie Buring, of Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, will co-lead the study.
"But we should be cautious before jumping on the bandwagon to take mega-doses of these supplements," Manson warned. "We know from history that many of these nutrients that looked promising in observational studies didn't pan out."
Vitamins C, E, folic acid, beta carotene, selenium and even menopause hormone pills once seemed to lower the risk of cancer or heart disease — until they were tested in big studies that sometimes revealed risks instead of benefits.
In October, the government stopped a big study of vitamin E and selenium pills for prostate cancer prevention after seeing no evidence of benefit and hints of harm.
Vitamin D is one of the last major nutrients to be put to a rigorous test.
Cancer rates higher where sun is weaker
For years, evidence has been building that many people are deficient in "the sunshine vitamin." It is tough to get enough from dietary sources like milk and oily fish. Cancer rates are higher in many northern regions where sunlight is weak in the winter, and some studies have found that people with lower blood levels of vitamin D are more likely to develop cancer.
Fish oil, or omega-3 fatty acid, is widely recommended for heart health. However, studies of it so far have mostly involved people who already have heart problems or who eat a lot of fish, such as in Japan. Foods also increasingly are fortified with omega-3, so it is important to establish its safety and benefit.
"Vitamin D and omega-3s have powerful anti-inflammatory effects that may be key factors in preventing many diseases. They may also work through other pathways that influence cancer and cardiovascular risk," Manson said.
However, getting nutrients from a pill is different than getting them from foods, and correcting a deficiency is not the same as healthy people taking large doses from a supplement.
20,000 people to be studied
The new study, which will start later this year, will enroll 20,000 people with no history of heart attacks, stroke or a major cancer — women 65 or older and men 60 or older. They will be randomly assigned to take vitamin D, fish oil, both nutrients or dummy pills for five years.
The daily dose of vitamin D will be about 2,000 international units of D-3, also known as cholecalciferol, the most active form. For fish oil, the daily dose will be about one gram — five to 10 times what the average American gets.
Participants' health will be monitored through questionnaires, medical records and in some cases, periodic in-person exams.
"We're hoping to see a result during the trial, that we won't have to wait five years" to find out if supplements help, Manson said.
Researchers also plan to study whether these nutrients help prevent memory loss, depression, diabetes, osteoporosis and other problems, Buring said.
The $20 million study will be sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, with the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and other federal agencies. Pharmavite LLC of Northridge, Calif., is providing the vitamin D pills, and Ocean Nutrition Canada Ltd. of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, is providing the omega-3 fish oil capsules.
Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
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Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
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Re: Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
They are necessary nutrients that are often sorely lacking in normal American diets. I'd be surprised if they don't indicate at least some benefit.
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Re: Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
Well, we've been surprised before.
Personally, I think we've evolved to get most of our vitamin D from sunlight (after my last two days working outside, with my pale hide, I should not be in any danger of deficiency). Not that there's anything wrong with getting some from your diet. But if diet doesn't work and you're dark skinned sunlamps may actually wind up as a better option than trying to get sufficient D from diet. But I have no problems with being proven wrong on that point.
As for fish oil - my husbands doc put him on a fish oil supplement based on our current, rather fragile evidence but it would be nice to know more definitively if it is useful or not.
Personally, I think we've evolved to get most of our vitamin D from sunlight (after my last two days working outside, with my pale hide, I should not be in any danger of deficiency). Not that there's anything wrong with getting some from your diet. But if diet doesn't work and you're dark skinned sunlamps may actually wind up as a better option than trying to get sufficient D from diet. But I have no problems with being proven wrong on that point.
As for fish oil - my husbands doc put him on a fish oil supplement based on our current, rather fragile evidence but it would be nice to know more definitively if it is useful or not.
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Re: Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
This is what I'm most curious about myself. I get plenty of Vitamin D through my diet and my outdoor exercise, but to learn that fish oil supplements are as useful as they currently seem to be would be a big boost. Plus it'd be nice to know that there's an additional thing we can do to stave off heart disease; i.e. one less thing to worry about.Broomstick wrote:As for fish oil - my husbands doc put him on a fish oil supplement based on our current, rather fragile evidence but it would be nice to know more definitively if it is useful or not.
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Re: Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
The current indications for fish oil (still very tentative) are not just for heart disease - fats and oils are critical the central nervous system, for example, which may be why fish oil seems to improve depression. People forget that fat is also an essential nutrient, even if we get too much of it, and it may be we require several types of fats and oils for optimum health. That's the hypothesis, it still needs to be proven or disproven.
A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. Leonard Nimoy.
Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.
If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich. - John F. Kennedy
Sam Vimes Theory of Economic Injustice
Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.
If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich. - John F. Kennedy
Sam Vimes Theory of Economic Injustice
Re: Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
Well, there's a reason some of the fats - like omega 3's, found largely in seafood - are called 'essential', and that's because they enable normal growth in children.
Also, omega-6 fatty acids, in a ratio with omega-3's, contribute to processes like clotting of platelets and are related to immune response - possibly relevant to asthma and arthritis. It will be very interesting to see how precisely the benefits of the oil can be ascertained.
Also, omega-6 fatty acids, in a ratio with omega-3's, contribute to processes like clotting of platelets and are related to immune response - possibly relevant to asthma and arthritis. It will be very interesting to see how precisely the benefits of the oil can be ascertained.
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Re: Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
What? No, that's not what essential means. "Essential", in the case of nutrients, means your body can't manufacture them on its own.
Otherwise, yes, omega-6/3 fatty acids are better for you than other fat sources, mostly because of they are mono- and poly-unsaturated fats.
Otherwise, yes, omega-6/3 fatty acids are better for you than other fat sources, mostly because of they are mono- and poly-unsaturated fats.
Re: Fish oil, vitamin D to be scrutinized in big study
Hm, I was aware of this for essential amino acids but didn't think to apply it to the fats. Okay.Erik von Nein wrote:What? No, that's not what essential means. "Essential", in the case of nutrients, means your body can't manufacture them on its own.
Well, that and they're useful for certain body processes like I said.Erik von Nein wrote:Otherwise, yes, omega-6/3 fatty acids are better for you than other fat sources, mostly because of they are mono- and poly-unsaturated fats.
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