Times Colonist

Supplement­s may be creating placebo effect

- DR. KEITH ROACH Your Good Health Email questions to ToYourGood­Health@med.cornell.edu.

Dear Dr. Roach: My wife and I have been taking glucosamin­e and chondroiti­n for several years for arthritis. We have found it to be very beneficial. We are 80 and 82.

In a recent consumer magazine, there was an article about pain, including a paragraph about glucosamin­e and chondroiti­n.

The article was negative about taking this supplement because of its sideeffect­s. The last sentence read: “The American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons doesn’t recommend glucosamin­e or chondroiti­n.” What are your recommenda­tions regarding these supplement­s?

D. and J.R. The data on glucosamin­e and chondroiti­n, which many people use for pain from osteoarthr­itis, is mixed.

I reviewed the American Academy of Orthopaedi­c Surgeons’ website on these supplement­s and found that I generally agree with its recommenda­tions. It’s noted that many people get pain relief from taking them (often in combinatio­n) and that side-effects are few. It is also noted that there is little good evidence that the supplement­s reverse joint damage from osteoarthr­itis.

The academy is concerned, as I have been, that there is no testing or analysis of supplement­s by the Food and Drug Administra­tion, and that a recent consumer laboratory found that almost half of supplement­s labelled “glucosamin­e/chondroiti­n” did not contain the labelled amount of ingredient­s.

I would point out that many people get a benefit because they expect to get a benefit. This phenomenon is known as the placebo effect. I am a proponent of using this effect in an ethical way.

To me, this means informing a patient of the likelihood that a treatment will be effective (whether medication, supplement, surgery or other treatment) relative to no treatment or to placebo treatment, when that is known. If a treatment is known to be no better than placebo, that needs to be disclosed. However, since the effectiven­ess of placebo at reducing symptoms may be as high as 30 per cent, many people still will get better with a placebo.

In my opinion, treatment that is only as good as a placebo or, as in this case, perhaps marginally better than placebo, should be considered only if the risk of side-effects is low, if the cost to the patient is low and, above all, if the patient is informed about the treatment’s effectiven­ess relative to placebo.

A placebo is unethical when there are other effective treatments not offered to the patient.

Dear Dr. Roach: My husband, 82, had prostate cancer surgery 11 years ago. His prostate-specific antigen goes up and down, mostly down, due to a Lupron shot. Does a higher PSA level mean cancer cells are present in the body? If so, how does lowering the PSA count treat cancer cells? Thank you for any insight you can give.

D.L. After prostate surgery, there usually are no more normal prostate cancer cells. This is confirmed when the PSA level goes to zero after surgery. Since only prostate and prostate cancer cells make PSA, any amount of PSA present in the blood probably is coming from prostate cancer. The higher the PSA level, the more cancer cells in the body. If the Lupron (which blocks testostero­ne, a hormone that helps prostate cancer cells grow) reduces the PSA, it means it is effective at treating the prostate cancer cells. Sometimes we cannot cure the prostate cancer, but can keep its growth controlled for a prolonged time with treatment.

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