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Vitamin B and folic acid may reduce risk of age-related vision loss
By News Release
Feb 23, 2009 - 9:55:22 PM
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Contact: Lori J. Shanks
ljshanks@partners.org
617-732-1604
JAMA and Archives Journals
Vitamin B and folic acid may reduce risk of age-related vision loss
Taking a combination of vitamins B6
and B12 and folic acid appears to decrease the risk of age-related
macular degeneration in women, according to a report in the February 23
issue of
Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the
JAMA/Archives journals.
Age-related
macular degeneration (AMD) is a leading cause of vision loss in older
Americans, according to background information in the article.
Treatment options exist for those with severe cases of the disease, but
the only known prevention method is to avoid smoking. Recent studies
have drawn a connection between AMD and blood levels of homocysteine,
an amino acid. High levels of homocysteine are associated with
dysfunction of the blood vessel lining, whereas treatment with vitamin
B6, vitamin B12 and folic acid appears to reduce homocysteine levels
and may reverse this blood vessel dysfunction.
William G.
Christen, Sc.D., of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical
School, Boston, and colleagues conducted a randomized, double-blind
clinical trial involving 5,442 women age 40 and older who already had
heart disease or at least three risk factors. Of these, 5,205 did not
have AMD at the beginning of the study. In April 1998, these women were
randomly assigned to take a placebo or a combination of folic acid (2.5
milligrams per day), pyridoxine hydrochloride (vitamin B6, 50
milligrams per day) and cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12, 1 milligram per
day). Participants continued the therapy through July 2005 and were
tracked for the development of AMD through November 2005.
Over
an average of 7.3 years of treatment and follow-up, 137 new cases of
AMD were documented, including 70 cases that were visually significant
(resulting in a visual acuity of 20/30 or worse). Of these, 55 AMD
cases, 26 visually significant, occurred in the 2,607 women in the
active treatment group, whereas 82 of the 2,598 women in the placebo
group developed AMD, 44 cases of which were visually significant. Women
taking the supplements had a 34 percent lower risk of any AMD and a 41
percent lower risk of visually significant AMD. "The beneficial effect
of treatment began to emerge at approximately two years of follow-up
and persisted throughout the trial," the authors write.
"The
trial findings reported herein are the strongest evidence to date in
support of a possible beneficial effect of folic acid and B vitamin
supplements in AMD prevention," the authors write. Because they apply
to the early stages of disease development, they appear to represent
the first identified way—other than not smoking—to reduce the risk of
AMD in individuals at an average risk. "From a public health
perspective, this is particularly important because persons with early
AMD are at increased risk of developing advanced AMD, the leading cause
of severe, irreversible vision loss in older Americans."
Beyond
lowering homocysteine levels, potential mechanisms for the
effectiveness of B vitamins and folic acid in preventing AMD include
antioxidant effects and improved function of blood vessels in the eye,
they note.
###
(
Arch Intern Med. 2009;169[4]:335-341. Available pre-embargo to the media at www.jamamedia.org.)
Editor's
Note: This study was supported by grants from the National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute and from the National Eye Institute. Vitamin E and
its placebo were provided by the Cognis Corporation. All other agents
and their placebos were provided by BASF corporation. Please see the
article for additional information, including other authors, author
contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and
support, etc.