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For Coronary Artery Disease patients, B
Vitamins may not reduce Cardiovascular
events
Newswise — In a large
clinical trial involving patients with
coronary artery disease, use of B vitamins
was not effective for preventing death or
cardiovascular events, according to a study
published in the August 20 issue of JAMA.
“Observational studies have
demonstrated that the concentration of total
homocysteine in blood is associated with
risk of coronary artery disease and stroke,”
the authors provide as background
information.
Plasma total homocysteine
levels can be lowered by oral administration
of folic acid and vitamin B12. In this
study, the authors’ objective was “to
evaluate the effects of homocysteine-lowering
treatment with folic acid plus vitamin B12
on mortality and cardiovascular events.”
Marta Ebbing, M.D. of
Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen,
Norway and colleagues, conducted a
randomized controlled study with 3,096
patients in two Norwegian hospitals between
1999 – 2006. Patients were randomly assigned
to one of four groups receiving a daily oral
dose of one of the following treatments:
folic acid, 0.8mg, plus vitamin B12 , 0.4mg,
plus vitamin B6 , 40mg (n= 772); folic acid
plus vitamin B12 (n = 772); vitamin B6 alone
(n = 772); or placebo (n = 780). Patients
were scheduled for follow-up visits with an
interview, clinical examination, and blood
sampling at one month, one year, and at a
final study visit. The main outcome measure
(primary end point) was a composite of
all-cause death, nonfatal acute myocardial
infarction (heart attack), acute
hospitalization for unstable angina
pectoris, and nonfatal thromboembolic
stroke.
The study was stopped early
because of concerns among the participants
about preliminary results from another
similar Norwegian study suggesting no
benefits from the treatment and an increased
risk of cancer from the B vitamins.
“Mean (average) plasma total
homocysteine concentration was reduced by 30
percent after 1 year of treatment in the
groups receiving folic acid and vitamin
B12,” the authors report.
“During a median (midpoint)
38 months of follow-up, the primary end
point was experienced by a total of 422
participants (13.7 percent): 219
participants (14.2 percent) receiving folic
acid/vitamin B12 vs. 203 (13.1 percent) not
receiving such treatment and 200
participants (13.0 percent) receiving
vitamin B6 vs. 222 (14.3 percent) not
receiving vitamin B6.”
“… we could not detect any
preventive effect of intervention with folic
acid plus vitamin B12 or with vitamin B6 on
mortality or major cardiovascular events
among patients with stable coronary artery
disease undergoing intensive conventional
treatment.
“We found a numerically lower
incidence of stroke and higher incidence of
cancer in the groups receiving folic acid,
but these observations were not
statistically significant,” the authors
conclude. “Our findings do not support the
use of B vitamins as secondary prevention in
patients with coronary artery disease.”
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