In a study of patients with head
and neck cancer, use of vitamin E supplements was associated
with an increased risk that their cancer would return or
that they'd develop a new cancer.
However, during the second
phase of the study when supplementation was discontinued,
former vitamin E takers had a lower risk of cancer than
their counterparts who had been given an inactive "placebo."
As a result, by the end of
the 8-year study, both groups had comparable cancer risks,
according to a report in the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute.
"We were surprised by the
findings," Dr. Francois Meyer, from Universite Laval in
Quebec, Canada, stated. "When we started the study, we had
hoped that vitamin E supplementation would reduce or delay
the risk of second primary cancer."
"If we would have stopped
the study after the first phase, we might have concluded
that vitamin E supplementation" had a true effect on cancer
risk, Meyer noted. However, the fact that the elevated risk
was not seen in the second phase suggests that such use
may simply have had a screening effect -- leading to earlier
detection of cancers, he explained.
The findings are based on
a study of 540 patients with head and neck cancer who were
treated with radiation therapy and randomly selected to
receive vitamin E, beta-carotene, or placebo for three years.
Because the results of another trial had linked beta-carotene
use with an increased risk of lung cancer, the beta-carotene
arm of Meyer's study was stopped early due to ethical concerns.
During a follow-up period
of around 52 months, 113 subjects developed new cancers
and 119 developed recurrences of their old cancer.
As noted, the risk of cancer
in each group depended on the phase of the study. During
the treatment phase, vitamin E users were 86 percent more
likely to develop cancer than placebo users. After treatment
was stopped, former vitamin E users were 29 percent less
likely to develop cancer compared with former placebo users.
"Usually, we say that people
should weigh the pros and cons when considering a particular
intervention," Meyer noted. "At the moment, there isn't
much evidence supporting the use of high-dose antioxidants,
(such as vitamin E), for long periods of time."
SOURCE: Journal of the National
Cancer Institute, April 6, 2005.