Save Your Money: Vast Majority Of
Dietary Supplements Don’t Improve Heart Health or Put Off Death
Johns Hopkins – July 16, 2019 -- n a massive new analysis of findings from 277 clinical trials using 24 different interventions, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers say they have found that almost all vitamin, mineral and other nutrient supplements or diets cannot be linked to longer life or protection from heart disease.
Although they found that most of the
supplements or diets were not associated with any harm, the analysis showed
possible health benefits only from a low-salt diet, omega-3 fatty acid
supplements and possibly folic acid supplements for some people. Researchers
also found that supplements combining calcium and vitamin D may in fact be linked
to a slightly increased stroke risk.
Results of the analysis were
published on July 8 in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Surveys by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention show that 52% of Americans take a least one vitamin or
other dietary/nutritional supplement daily. As a nation, Americans spend $31
billion each year on such over-the-counter products. An increasing number of
studies --including this new one from Johns Hopkins --have failed to prove
health benefits from most of them.
“The panacea or magic bullet that
people keep searching for in dietary supplements isn’t there,” says senior
author of the study Erin D. Michos, M.D., M.H.S., associate director of
preventive cardiology at the Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of
Cardiovascular Disease and associate professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine. “People should focus on getting their nutrients
from a heart-healthy diet, because the data increasingly show that the majority
of healthy adults don’t need to take supplements.”
For the current study, the
researchers used data from 277 randomized clinical trials that evaluated 16
vitamins or other supplements and eight diets for their association with
mortality or heart conditions including coronary heart disease, stroke, and
heart attack. All together they included data gathered on 992,129 research
participants worldwide.
The vitamin and other supplements
reviewed included: antioxidants, β-carotene, vitamin B-complex, multivitamins,
selenium, vitamin A, vitamin B3/niacin, vitamin B6, vitamin C, vitamin E,
vitamin D alone, calcium alone, calcium and vitamin D together, folic acid,
iron and omega-3 fatty acid (fish oil). The diets reviewed were a Mediterranean
diet, a reduced saturated fat (less fats from meat and dairy) diet, modified
dietary fat intake (less saturated fat or replacing calories with more
unsaturated fats or carbohydrates), a reduced fat diet, a reduced salt diet in
healthy people and those with high blood pressure, increased alpha linolenic
acid (ALA) diet (nuts, seeds and vegetable oils), and increased omega-6 fatty
acid diet (nuts, seeds and vegetable oils). Each intervention was also ranked
by the strength of the evidence as high, moderate, low or very low risk impact.
The majority of the supplements including
multivitamins, selenium, vitamin A, vitamin B6, vitamin C, vitamin E, vitamin D
alone, calcium alone and iron showed no link to increased or decreased risk of
death or heart health.
In the three studies
of 3,518 people that looked at a low-salt diet in people with healthy blood
pressure, there were 79 deaths. The researchers say that they found a 10%
decrease in the risk of death in these people, which they classified as a
moderate associated impact.
Of the five studies in
which 3,680 participants with high blood pressure were put on a low-salt diet,
they found that the risk of death due to heart disease decreased by 33%, as
there were 674 heart disease deaths during the study periods. They also
classified this intervention as moderate evidence of an impact.
Forty-one studies with
134,034 participants evaluated the possible impact of omega-3 fatty acid
supplements. In this group, 10,707 people had events such as a heart attack or
stroke indicating heart disease. Overall, these studies suggested that supplement
use was linked to an 8 percent reduction in heart attack risk and a 7 percent
reduction in coronary heart disease compared to those not on the supplements.
The researchers ranked evidence for a beneficial link to this intervention as
low.
Based on 25 studies in
25,580 healthy people, data also showed that folic acid was linked to a 20
percent reduced risk of stroke. Some 877 participants had strokes during the
trials. The authors graded evidence for a link to beneficial effects as low.
The authors point out
that the studies suggesting the greatest impact of folic acid supplementation
on reducing stroke risk took place in China, where cereals and grains aren’t
fortified with folic acid like they are in the U.S. Thus, they say, this
apparent protective effect may not be applicable in regions where most people
get enough folic acid in their diet.
Twenty studies
evaluated the combination of calcium with vitamin D in a supplement. Of the
42,072 research participants, 3,690 had strokes during the trials, and taken
together the researchers say this suggests a 17% increased risk for stroke. The
risk evidence was ranked as moderate. There was no evidence that calcium or
vitamin D taken alone had any health risks or benefits.
“Our analysis carries
a simple message that although there may be some evidence that a few interventions have an impact on death and cardiovascular health, the vast
majority of multivitamins, minerals and different types of diets had no
measurable effect on survival or cardiovascular disease risk reduction,” says
lead author Safi U. Khan, M.D., an assistant professor of Medicine at West
Virginia University.
Other authors include
Muhammad U. Khan and Shahul Valavoor of West Virginia University; Haris Riaz of
Cleveland Clinic; Di Zhao, Michael J. Blaha and Eliseo Guallar of Johns
Hopkins; Lauren Vaughan and Victor Okunrintemi of East Carolina University;
Irbaz Bin Riaz and M. Hassan Murad of Mayo Clinic; Muhammad Shahzeb Khan of the
John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County; and Edo Kaluski of the Guthrie
Health System.
The authors received
no financial support for this research study and declare no conflicts of
interest.
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