Please Scroll Down to See Forums Below
napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply
puritysourcelabs
UGL OZ
UGFREAK
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsUGL OZUGFREAK

Vitamins increase prostate cancer risk by 30%

Island Son

New member
http://www.thestar.com/Health/article/214099

Vitamin-popping linked to prostate cancer
May 15, 2007 02:53 PM
Julie Steenhuysen
Reuters News Agency

CHICAGO - Men who pop too many vitamins in the hope of improving their health may in fact be raising their risk of the deadliest forms of prostate cancer, especially men with a family history of the disease, researchers said Tuesday.

Researchers at the National Cancer Institute found that men who exceeded the recommended dose - taking more than seven multivitamins a week - increased the risk of advanced cancer by about 30 per cent.

The researchers followed 295,344 men over five years to see if there was a link between multivitamin use and prostate cancer.

“We didn’t see any relationship with overall prostate cancer,” said Dr. Michael Leitzmann, a National Cancer Institute investigator who worked on the study.

He said the increased risk from overuse of multivitamins was linked to more aggressive cancer that has spread beyond the prostate gland or cancer that proved fatal.

In men who took too many multivitamins, the risk of aggressive cancer increased by one third, and the risk of fatal prostate cancer doubled compared to those who took no multivitamins, according to the study, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

“We only saw the increase among the subgroup of men who used multivitamins in excessive amounts,” Leitzmann said in a telephone interview.

The researchers said the association was strongest in men with a family history of prostate cancer and men who also took selenium, beta-carotene or zinc supplements.

Just over a quarter of a million men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in the United States this year, but fewer than 30,000 will die of it because the tumors grow slowly.

No studies have yet found that people benefit from taking multivitamin and mineral supplements, and some studies have found that vitamins like A and iron are toxic at high levels. Beta-carotene has been found to increase the risk of lung cancer in smokers.

Leitzmann said the researchers were not able to pinpoint which vitamin or supplement ingredient could be driving the cancer. What it does suggest is the need for more study,

“It’s certainly a red flag,” he said.

The important thing, Leitzmann said, was that men should heed the dosage on their vitamin bottle and use as directed.
 
Shit! - That's me - I have a family history - in fact - EVERY single male in my family has had prostate cancer - I guess it's a done deal. I have been taking vitamins for years. Well - I don't exceed the dosage though. Still, this is not good.
 
that could mean anything. Someone is taking more vitamins because they dont eat right, or have higher risks of cancer and want to prevent it, or it's just one of the minerals not vitamins. like zinc. Or it's increasing the cancer that is already there. But just to say that someone that takes a multivitamin is going to get cancer is a giant leap that conclusion
 
MTS said:
that could mean anything. Someone is taking more vitamins because they dont eat right, or have higher risks of cancer and want to prevent it, or it's just one of the minerals not vitamins. like zinc. Or it's increasing the cancer that is already there. But just to say that someone that takes a multivitamin is going to get cancer is a giant leap that conclusion

It's for exceeding the recommended amount, I guess if you take a multi AND say that ACE combo. Fat-soluble vitamins are known to be toxic in large amounts... besides, they're not saying why it happens, only that they've noticed the correlation. I wouldn't be surprised if it's the extra beta-carotene, which was found awhile back to increase the occurrence of lung cancer in smokers.
 
The RDA for vitamins is a fuzzy science. For example, Vitamin D requirements were developed when people spent more time out in the sun. These days when people avoid the sun and use sunscreen, the body produces less Vitamin D. Based upon this a Harvard professor thinks that the Vitamin D requirements should be revisited.

RDAs are a set number for all adults. There is no consideration given to weight, age, gender or other factors which influence the metabolism of vitamins. Also, this study is most likely of men who self report their behaviors. Self reporting is notoriously subject to inaccuracies.

On the up side the study has a large N.
 
Top Bottom