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Increasing Number of Americans Using Vitamin Supplements |
In a new study of people with moderate or severe lung
disease, taking large amounts of vitamin D was not linked to any symptom
relief, researchers from Belgium report.
Prior research suggested that up to three quarters of people
with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, are deficient in
the vitamin. So it was thought that giving them extra vitamin D might help
prevent exacerbations in symptoms or trips to the hospital because of shortness
of breath or mucus in the airways -- but that turned out not to be the case.
"Supplementation with vitamin D is not going to cure
their disease," said Dr. Wim Janssens, one of the study's authors from
University Hospitals Leuven.
"It is again clear for COPD patients that these
exacerbations are really hard to treat" and prevent, Janssens told Reuters
Health.
"There are a lot of relapses. We're basically failing
in treating these."
Though vitamin D is most often associated with bone health
and osteoporosis, Janssens said the theory has been that the vitamin may help
reduce inflammation, including inflammation in the airways that worsens COPD
symptoms, such as coughing and trouble breathing.
COPD is irreversible impairment of lung function, including
emphysema and chronic bronchitis, often caused by smoking. One large national
health survey suggests some 24 million Americans have the condition, according
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Janssens and his colleagues randomly assigned 182 people at
their hospital with moderate to severe forms of the disease to take high-dose
vitamin D pills, or a vitamin-free placebo pill, every four weeks for a year.
One hundred and fifty of them finished the study.
Over that year, patients on vitamin D reported a total of
229 exacerbations in symptoms, for an average of 2.8 exacerbations in each
patient. That was not statistically different from the 239 exacerbations, or
2.9 per patient, among those taking the placebo.
Symptoms were severe enough to send patients taking vitamin
D to the hospital 79 times during the study, and people in the placebo group 73
times.
There was also no difference between the two groups in the
amount of time until patients had their first exacerbation, or in measures of
lung functioning, fatigue or the risk of death.
The researchers did find that among 30 people who had a very
severe vitamin D deficiency at the start of the study, those taking the
supplements had fewer problems with symptoms.
But because they didn't plan to explore that question from
the beginning, and only found it on a second look at the data, it's hard to
tell what the finding means.
"That would indicate that if there's any effect, there
might be something in patients with really low levels. That's not the majority
of patients with COPD," said Dr. Ken Kunisaki, from the Minneapolis VA
Healthcare System.
More research would be needed to confirm if the vitamin is
of any benefit even in those very deficient patients, added Kunisaki, who has
also studied vitamin D in COPD but wasn't involved in the new research.
He said the current findings are in line with other research
suggesting that although vitamin D deficiency might be more common in people
with COPD, higher levels don't necessarily seem to equate with fewer symptoms.
"Unfortunately the results have been somewhat
disappointing," Kunisaki said. "Right now there's no evidence that
patients with COPD are going to benefit from additional vitamin D."
Researchers have also proposed that vitamin D may be helpful
in patients with multiple sclerosis or tuberculosis, among other diseases, but
studies generally haven't panned out, Janssens and his colleagues wrote in
their report, published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
He said that in spite of his team's lack of positive
findings, people with or without COPD shouldn't ignore very low vitamin D
levels.
"If you're deficient, you need supplementation to
normal levels just to treat your bone, to protect from osteoporosis and
fractures," he said. "If you (have) severe deficiency,
supplementation might also be effective for inflammation" associated with
COPD.
Kunisaki cautioned that researchers still don't know whether
there are long-term risks associated with taking high doses of vitamin D or
other vitamins.
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