Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Big studies give mixed news on fish oil, vitamin D

- By Marilynn Marchione

Taking fish oil or vitamin D? Big studies give long-awaited answers on who does and does not benefit from these popular nutrients.

Fish oil taken by healthy people, at a dose found in many supplement­s, showed no clear ability to lower heart or cancer risks. Same for vitamin D.

But higher amounts of a purified, prescripti­on fish oil slashed heart problems and heart-related deaths among people with high triglyceri­des, a type of fat in the blood, and other risks for heart disease. Doctors cheered the results and said they could suggest a new treatment option for hundreds of thousands of patients like these.

Up to 10 percent of U.S. adults take fish oil . Even more take vitamin D , despite no major studies to support the many health claims made for it.

“Those who peddle it promote it as good for everything,” but in this definitive test, vitamin D “showed a big nothing,” said Dr. James Stein, a heart specialist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He had no role in the studies or ties to the companies involved.

Results were revealed Saturday at an American Heart Associatio­n conference in Chicago and published by the New England Journal of Medicine.

One study tested 4 grams a day of Amarin Corp.’s prescripti­on Vascepa, which is concentrat­ed EPA, in more than 8,000 patients with high triglyceri­des and a greater risk of heart problems for various reasons. All were already taking a statin such as Lipitor or Zocor to lower cholestero­l. Half were given Vascepa and the rest, mineral oil capsules as a comparison.

After five years, about 17 percent of those on Vascepa had suffered one of these problems — a heart attack, stroke, heart-related death or clogged arteries requiring medical care — versus 22 percent of the others.

That worked out to a 25 percent reduction in risk. Looked at individual­ly, heart attacks, heart-related deaths and strokes all were lower with Vascepa. Only 21 people would need to take Vascepa for five years to prevent one of the main problems studied — favorable odds, Stein said.

Side effects may be a concern: More people on Vascepa were hospitaliz­ed for an irregular heartbeat — 3 percent versus 2 percent of the comparison group. Doctors say that’s puzzling because other research suggests fish oil lowers that risk.

The concern with the heart rhythm problem is that it can raise the risk of stroke, but there were fewer strokes among those on Vascepa, said study leader Dr. Deepak Bhatt of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Vascepa costs around $280 a month; many insurers cover it. Amarin sponsored the study and some study leaders work or consult for the company. a different type of fish oil — an EPA/DHA combo sold as Lovaza or Omacor and in generic form — in 26,000 people with no prior heart problems or cancer.

After about five years, rates of a combined measure of heart attacks, strokes and other problems were similar for fish oil users and a comparison group. Cancer rates and deaths also were similar.

There were fewer heart attacks in the fish oil group — 145 versus 200 in the comparison group. The study leader, Dr. JoAnn Manson at Brigham and Women’s, called that “a substantia­l benefit,” but several independen­t experts disagreed because of the way the study was set up to track this and certain other results.

“These findings are speculativ­e and would need to be confirmed in a separate trial,” said the Cleveland Clinic’s Dr. Steven Nissen.

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