Lancet. 2002 Jul 6;360(9326):23-33. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)09328-5.
It has been suggested that increased intake of various antioxidant vitamins reduces the incidence rates of vascular disease, cancer, and other adverse outcomes.
20,536 UK adults (aged 40-80) with coronary disease, other occlusive arterial disease, or diabetes were randomly allocated to receive antioxidant vitamin supplementation (600 mg vitamin E, 250 mg vitamin C, and 20 mg beta-carotene daily) or matching placebo. Intention-to-treat comparisons of outcome were conducted between all vitamin-allocated and all placebo-allocated participants. An average of 83% of participants in each treatment group remained compliant during the scheduled 5-year treatment period. Allocation to this vitamin regimen approximately doubled the plasma concentration of alpha-tocopherol, increased that of vitamin C by one-third, and quadrupled that of beta-carotene. Primary outcomes were major coronary events (for overall analyses) and fatal or non-fatal vascular events (for subcategory analyses), with subsidiary assessments of cancer and of other major morbidity.
There were no significant differences in all-cause mortality (1446 [14.1%] vitamin-allocated vs 1389 [13.5%] placebo-allocated), or in deaths due to vascular (878 [8.6%] vs 840 [8.2%]) or non-vascular (568 [5.5%] vs 549 [5.3%]) causes. Nor were there any significant differences in the numbers of participants having non-fatal myocardial infarction or coronary death (1063 [10.4%] vs 1047 [10.2%]), non-fatal or fatal stroke (511 [5.0%] vs 518 [5.0%]), or coronary or non-coronary revascularisation (1058 [10.3%] vs 1086 [10.6%]). For the first occurrence of any of these "major vascular events", there were no material differences either overall (2306 [22.5%] vs 2312 [22.5%]; event rate ratio 1.00 [95% CI 0.94-1.06]) or in any of the various subcategories considered. There were no significant effects on cancer incidence or on hospitalisation for any other non-vascular cause.
Among the high-risk individuals that were studied, these antioxidant vitamins appeared to be safe. But, although this regimen increased blood vitamin concentrations substantially, it did not produce any significant reductions in the 5-year mortality from, or incidence of, any type of vascular disease, cancer, or other major outcome.
有人提出,增加各种抗氧化维生素的摄入量可降低血管疾病、癌症及其他不良后果的发病率。
20536名患有冠心病、其他闭塞性动脉疾病或糖尿病的英国成年人(年龄在40 - 80岁之间)被随机分配接受抗氧化维生素补充剂(每日600毫克维生素E、250毫克维生素C和20毫克β-胡萝卜素)或匹配的安慰剂。对所有分配维生素的参与者和所有分配安慰剂的参与者进行意向性治疗结果比较。在预定的5年治疗期内,每个治疗组平均83%的参与者保持依从性。分配到这种维生素方案使α-生育酚的血浆浓度增加了约一倍,使维生素C的浓度增加了三分之一,使β-胡萝卜素的浓度增加了四倍。主要结局是主要冠状动脉事件(用于总体分析)和致命或非致命血管事件(用于亚组分析),并对癌症和其他主要发病率进行辅助评估。
全因死亡率(分配维生素组为1446例[14.1%],分配安慰剂组为1389例[13.5%])、血管性死亡(878例[8.6%]对840例[8.2%])或非血管性死亡(568例[5.5%]对549例[5.3%])均无显著差异。非致命性心肌梗死或冠状动脉死亡的参与者数量(1063例[10.4%]对1047例[10.2%])、非致命或致命性中风(511例[5.0%]对518例[5.0%])、冠状动脉或非冠状动脉血运重建(1058例[10.3%]对1086例[10.6%])也均无显著差异。对于这些“主要血管事件”中任何一种的首次发生,总体上(2306例[22.5%]对2312例[22.5%];事件发生率比为1.00[95%可信区间0.94 - 1.06])或在任何考虑的亚组中均无实质性差异。对癌症发病率或任何其他非血管性原因导致的住院治疗均无显著影响。
在研究的高危个体中,这些抗氧化维生素似乎是安全的。但是,尽管这种方案大幅提高了血液中维生素的浓度,但它并未使任何类型的血管疾病、癌症或其他主要结局的5年死亡率或发病率显著降低。