WASHINGTON(AP)
There's more worrisome news about vitamins: Taking too many
may increase men's risk of dying from prostate cancer.
The study, being published Wednesday, doesn't settle the
issue. But it is the biggest yet to suggest high-dose multivitamins
may harm the prostate, and the latest chapter in the confusing
quest to tell whether taking various vitamins really helps a
variety of conditions _ or is a waste of money, or worse.
Government scientists turned to a study tracking the diet and
health of almost 300,000 men. About a third reported taking a daily
multivitamin, and 5 percent were heavy users, swallowing the pills
more than seven times a week.
Within five years of the study's start, 10,241 men had been
diagnosed with prostate cancer. Some 1,476 had advanced cancer; 179
died.
Heavy multivitamin users were almost twice as likely to get
fatal prostate cancer as men who never took the pills, concludes
the study in Wednesday's Journal of the National Cancer
Institute.
Here's the twist: Overall, the researchers found no link
between multivitamin use and early-stage prostate cancer.
The researchers speculate that perhaps high-dose vitamins had
little effect until a tumor appeared, and then could spur its
growth.
While similar but smaller studies have suggested a link, too,
more rigorous research is needed, caution the National Cancer
Institute scientists. This newest study involves men who
voluntarily took vitamins, and those most at risk _ perhaps because
they had a family history of the disease _ may have been more
likely to take the pills in hopes of avoiding their fate.
Still, "the findings lend further credence to the
possibility of harm associated with increased use of
supplements," Dr. Christian Gluud of Copenhagen University
Hospital and Dr. Goran Bjelakovic of Serbia's University of Nis
wrote in an accompanying editorial.
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