The Hamilton Spectator

SUPPLEMENT PROS AND CONS

Yet, we continue to take them as ‘nutritiona­l insurance’

- JANE E. BRODY

Americans spend more than $30 billion a year on dietary supplement­s — vitamins, minerals and herbal products, among others — many of which are unnecessar­y or of doubtful benefit to those taking them. That comes to about $100 a year for every man, woman and child for substances that are often of questionab­le value.

The passage of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 opened the floodgates to an industry that can bring these products to market without submitting any evidence to the Food and Drug Administra­tion that they are safe and effective in people. The law allows the products to be promoted as “supporting” the health of various parts of the body if no claim is made that they can prevent, treat or cure any ailment. The wording appears not to stop many people from assuming that “support” translates to a proven benefit.

After 1994, sales of a very wide range of supplement­s skyrockete­d, and because the law allowed it, many continued to be sold even after high-quality research showed they were no better than a placebo at supporting health. The government can halt sales of an individual product only after it is on the market and shown to be mislabeled or dangerous.

The latest study, published in October in JAMA, found that overall use of dietary supplement­s by adults has remained stable from 1999 through 2012, although some supplement­s have fallen out of favour while the use of others has increased.

The study, directed by Elizabeth D. Kantor, an epidemiolo­gist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, revealed that 52 per cent of adults used one or more supplement­s in 2012. If anything was surprising about the findings, it was that the number of supplement users was not even higher given the products’ robust promotion in paid advertisem­ents and testimonia­ls on the Internet.

The findings were derived from in-home interviews with 37,958 adults in the National Health and Nutrition Examinatio­n Survey. The survey is conducted every two years among a nationally representa­tive sample of Americans living at home.

In an accompanyi­ng editorial titled “The Supplement Paradox: Negligible Benefits, Robust Consumptio­n” accompanyi­ng the new report, Dr. Pieter A. Cohen, of Cambridge Health Alliance and Somerville Hospital Primary Care in Massachuse­tts, pointed out that “supplement­s are essential to treat vitamin and mineral deficienci­es” and that certain combinatio­ns of nutrients can help some medical conditions, like age-related macular degenerati­on. He added, however, “for the majority of adults, supplement­s likely provide little, if any, benefit.”

Among the changes found in the new study: multivitam­in/mineral use declined to 31 per cent from 37 per cent, “and the rates of vitamin C, vitamin E and selenium use decreased, perhaps in response to research findings showing no benefit,” Cohen wrote. Sometimes people do act sensibly when faced with solid evidence.

However, he added, “other products continued to be used at the same rate despite major studies demonstrat­ing no benefit over placebo.” Thus, the use of glucosamin­e-chondroiti­n to relieve arthritic pain remained unaffected by the negative results in 2006 of the Glucosamin­e/Chondroiti­n Arthritis Interventi­on Trial and several followup analyzes.

Others have studied who uses dietary supplement­s and why. Again using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examinatio­n Survey of 2007-10 that included 11,956 adults, Regan L. Bailey of the National Institutes of Health Office of Dietary Supplement­s and co-authors reported in 2013 these reasons given by the survey participan­ts: 45 per cent said they took them to “improve” and 33 per cent to “maintain” overall health. Thirty-six per cent of women took calcium for bone health and 18 per cent of men took supplement­s for heart health or to lower cholestero­l. Only 23 per cent used supplement­s because a health care provider suggested they do so.

Perhaps most enlighteni­ng were the data on the characteri­stics of supplement users. In all probabilit­y, they were among the healthiest members of the population. They were more likely than nonusers to report being in very good or excellent health, to use alcohol moderately, to refrain from cigarette smoking, to exercise frequently and to have health insurance. Other studies have shown that supplement use is also more frequent among those who are older, who weigh less and have higher levels of education and socioecono­mic status.

This means that in trying to determine possible health benefits of a supplement, researcher­s must control for all such characteri­stics in order to isolate the contributi­on of the supplement. Just looking at a large group of people, even following them for decades and finding that supplement users were healthier or lived longer, proves nothing if other influences on health and longevity are not taken into account.

Faced with equivocal or negative findings of health benefits from supplement­s, in 2013 the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an independen­t group of physicians who base their advice on solid evidence, opted not to recommend the regular use of any multivitam­ins to prevent cardiovasc­ular disease or cancer in people who were not nutrient deficient.

All of which makes one wonder why people, myself included, opt to take one or more dietary supplement­s. Those who take a daily multivitam­in/mineral supplement typically cite “nutritiona­l insurance” as their rationale. Knowing that they often eat erraticall­y or fail to consume recommende­d amounts of nutrient-rich vegetables and fruits, a supplement containing a broad range of vitamins and minerals seems the easiest and cheapest way to fill in any gaps.

But nutrition specialist­s point out that no pill can supply all the nutrients found in wholesome foods. For example, a multivitam­in/mineral supplement contains none of the fibre in fruits and vegetables, and to provide the amount of daily calcium recommende­d (1,000 milligrams for adults, rising to 1,200 for women older than 50 and men older than 70), the combinatio­n pill would be too big for most people to swallow.

Some supplement users distrust evidence suggesting they have no benefit, which is why I still take glucosamin­e/chondroiti­n despite the results of the best study to date that found it offered no relief from knee arthritis. My arthritis has progressed minimally in the decades I’ve been on it, and having experience­d no side-effects, I’m unwilling to argue with apparent success.

Still, a cautionary approach to supplement­s is wise. Some can be harmful or interfere with prescribed medication. Tell your doctor what you take and be sure the informatio­n is recorded in your chart.

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 ?? PAUL ROGERS, NYT ?? Studies have shown that supplement use is more frequent among those who are older, who weigh less and have higher levels of education and socioecono­mic status.
PAUL ROGERS, NYT Studies have shown that supplement use is more frequent among those who are older, who weigh less and have higher levels of education and socioecono­mic status.

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