Many people have been advised to take vitamin supplements to
boost their immune systems. However, a recent study published in the British
Journal of Nutrition found that taking vitamin E supplements led to an
increased risk of pneumonia for more than one in four older men (28%) who
smoked and did not exercise. However, the opposite effect was true for older
men who exercised and did not smoke - in that vitamin E actually decreased
their risk of contracting pneumonia.
The findings of this study - which
focused on men aged 50 to 69 years old at the baseline of the trial- are
particularly striking because analyses in nutritional epidemiology usually
assume a uniform effect of a nutrient. However, the author of the study - Dr.
Harri Hemilä of the University of Helsinki, Finland - found that the effect of
vitamin E on health outcomes may depend on various characteristics of people
and their lifestyles. Therefore, a single universal estimate of the vitamin E
effect might be substantially misleading for some population groups.
The author studied the effect of
vitamin E on the risk of pneumonia in a large randomised trial
(Alpha-Tocopherol Beta-Carotene Cancer Prevention Study - ATBC) conducted in
Finland between 1985 and 1993. There were 898 cases of pneumonia among 29,133
participants of the study.
Drawing on the I2 statistic for the
first time for this type of analysis, Dr. Hemilä concluded that nearly all
variation in the vitamin E effect on pneumonia risk over five subgroups was
explained by true differences in the vitamin E effect rather than by chance
variation.
Vitamin E increased pneumonia risk by
68% among men who had the highest exposure to smoking and who did not exercise
(22% of the ATBC participants), while vitamin E actually decreased pneumonia
risk by 69% among participants who had the least exposure to smoking and who
exercised during their leisure time (7·6% of the ATBC participants). The author
claims that these findings refute there being a uniform effect of vitamin E
supplementation on the risk of pneumonia.
The high level of true heterogeneity
in the effect of vitamin E on pneumonia has important implications. First, it
provides a strong argument against the opinion that subgroup analyses of
randomised trials should be strongly discouraged because they can lead to false
positive findings due to the multiple comparison problem. Second, the average
effects of vitamin E that are calculated in meta-analyses may not be valid for
many population groups. Third, in cohort studies, confounders are adjusted to
allow the calculation of a single estimate of effect over the study population.
However, when several variables modify the effect of vitamin E, it is evident
that the effects of vitamin E should be investigated separately in
subpopulations with those characteristics.
Given the current limited
understanding about who might benefit, Dr. Hemilä recommends that vitamin E
should not be suggested for the general population for improving the immune
system. The author concludes that there is a need for further research on
vitamin E for non-smoking elderly men who exercise in their leisure time.
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