Experts have raised concerns about vitamin supplements
Vitamin supplements 'do us no good and may be harmful'
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
We swallow them by the bucketload at great expense but there is no evidence
vitamin supplements do us any good, and they may even be doing us harm,
scientists have concluded.
In a blow to the multimillion pound dietary supplement industry, a review of
67 randomised trials of vitamin pills has found that far from prolonging
life, they may actually shorten it.
There is "no convincing evidence" that antioxidant supplements cut the risk
of dying prematurely and some of the commonest ones may increase the risk of
early death, according to the review, published by The Cochrane
Collaboration.
One in three women and one in four men in the UK are estimated to take
vitamin pills to ward off disease. Despite several studies warning of
potential dangers, the industry continues to thrive.
The latest review, one of the largest involving 232,000 participants,
compared those taking the supplements with those who took a placebo or
received no treatment. The supplements studied were beta-carotene (a
precursor of vitamin A that is converted into the vitamin in the body),
vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin E and selenium.
Goran Bjelakovich, the visiting researcher who led the systematic review at
Copenhagen University, said: "We could find no evidence to support taking
antioxidant supplements to reduce the risk of dying earlier in healthy
people or patients with various diseases."
"The findings show that, if anything, people in trial groups given
beta-carotene, vitamin A and vitamin E showed increased rates of mortality.
There was no indication that vitamin C and selenium may have positive or
negative effects; we need more data [on these]."
The researchers separated out the 47 trials with a low risk of bias and in
these they found a significantly increased death rate. When taken
separately, vitamin A was associated with a 16 per cent increased mortality,
beta-carotene with a 7 per cent increase and vitamin E with a 4 per cent
increase. For vitamin C and selenium there was no significant increase or
decrease in the death rate.
Dr Bjelakovich said: "The bottom line is that current evidence does not
support the use of antioxidant supplements in the general healthy
population." The researchers were unable to explain their findings but said
"excessive antioxidants can adversely affect key physiological processes".
Yesterday, Pamela Mason, of the Health Supplements Information Service,
said: "Trials using antioxidant supplements have shown inconsistent findings
and yet another review is not going to tell us anything at this stage that
we do not already know."