Prescribing calcium and vitamin D supplements for men at risk of bone
loss from hormonal treatment for prostate cancer seems like good medicine.
But new research from epidemiologists at Wake
Forest Baptist Medical Center showed that this type of supplementation did not
prevent bone loss and, in fact, may increase the risk of cardiovascular disease
and aggressive prostate cancer. The study was published online in the July
issue of the journal The Oncologist.
"It wouldn't be so bad if there simply
was no obvious benefit," said Gary G. Schwartz, Ph.D., who is a
nationally-recognized prostate cancer epidemiologist at Wake Forest Baptist and
lead author of the study. "The problem is that there is evidence that
calcium supplements increase the risk of cardiovascular disease and aggressive
prostate cancer, the very disease that we are trying to treat."
Androgen deprivation therapy
(ADT) is the mainstay treatment for men with advanced prostate cancer. It
reduces serum levels of androgens on which most prostate cancers depend. Like
women undergoing menopause, a side effect of ADT in men is bone loss, or
osteoporosis. Consequently, many physicians recommend calcium and vitamin D
supplements to help reduce fracture risk in these men, which can be a
significant problem. One in 10 of these men will experience a fracture within
two years of therapy.
"Calcium and/or vitamin D
supplementation to prevent loss of bone mineral density in these men seems so
logical that no one had questioned whether it works," said Mridul Datta,
Ph.D., co-author of the study and a postdoctoral fellow who works with Schwartz
at Wake Forest Baptist.
In the study, the researchers
reviewed guidelines for calcium and/or vitamin D supplementation. They also
reviewed the results of 12 clinical trials of supplemental calcium and/or
vitamin D in a total of 2,399 men with prostate cancer undergoing ADT, as well
as the measurements of bone mineral density before and after ADT.
"We used these data to
determine whether calcium and vitamin D supplements prevented bone loss in
these men," Datta said. "The answer clearly is, 'No.'" The study
showed that at the doses commonly recommended -- 500 to 1,000 mg of calcium and
200 to 500 IU of vitamin D per day -- men undergoing ADT lost bone mineral
density.
The lack of an obvious benefit is
worrisome because other data show an association between increased dietary
calcium and an increased risk of aggressive prostate cancer and heart disease,
Schwartz said.
Further research is needed to
verify these findings, he said, by comparing a calcium and vitamin D supplement
treated group vs. a non-supplemented group and looking not only at the
potential benefits – in bone mineral density and in the risk of fracture -- but
also at the possible risks, including unwanted cardiovascular effects and the
effects on prostate cancer itself.
"The wakeup call of these
findings," said Datta, "is that the presumption of benefit from
calcium and vitamin D supplements that have been routinely recommended to these
men must be rigorously evaluated."
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