Office of Dietary Supplements and.
J Nutr. 2014 Apr;144(4):414-8. doi: 10.3945/jn.113.189803. Epub 2014 Feb 12.
The U.S. dietary supplement market increased by 7.5% in 2012 compared with 2011, reaching $32.5 billion in sales. Therefore, federally supported research on dietary supplements is important to determine their health effects, safety, and efficacy. A portfolio analysis was performed across the NIH and the Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS) for fiscal years (FYs) 2009-2011 by using the databases Human Nutrition Research Information Management (HNRIM) and Computer Access to Research on Dietary Supplements (CARDS). The results indicated that total NIH dietary supplement-related funding for FYs 2009-2011 was $855 million ($295 million in 2009, $311 million in 2010, and $249 million in 2011). The institutes and centers with the highest investment in dietary supplement research were as follows: the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute ($135 million); the National Cancer Institute ($188 million); the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine ($99 million); the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases ($68 million); the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences ($58 million); and the ODS ($32 million). The dietary supplement ingredients receiving the most funding were botanicals (22%), vitamins (20%), lipids (14%), and minerals and trace elements (10%). The top 3 outcome research areas were cancer (61% of total dietary supplement investment), cardiovascular disease (47%), and women's reproductive health (38%). In FYs 2009, 2010, and 2011, the ODS provided 3.5%, 3.6%, and 4.1%, respectively, of the NIH investment in dietary supplement research. ODS funding focused on cellular, enzymatic, or molecular mechanisms (64% of total ODS funding). This portfolio analysis demonstrates that the NIH has committed substantial funding to dietary supplement research in an effort to expand the scientific knowledge base on the efficacy and safety of dietary supplements.
2012 年,美国膳食补充剂市场销售额增长 7.5%,达到 325 亿美元。因此,联邦政府支持对膳食补充剂进行研究,以确定其健康影响、安全性和功效。本研究通过使用人类营养研究信息管理系统(HNRIM)和膳食补充剂计算机检索数据库(CARDS),对 NIH 和膳食补充剂办公室(ODS)在 2009-2011 财年的投资组合进行了分析。结果表明,2009-2011 财年 NIH 膳食补充剂相关资金总额为 8.55 亿美元(2009 年为 2.95 亿美元,2010 年为 3.11 亿美元,2011 年为 2.49 亿美元)。在膳食补充剂研究方面投资最多的研究所和中心如下:国家心肺血液研究所(1.35 亿美元);国家癌症研究所(1.88 亿美元);国家补充与替代医学中心(9900 万美元);国家糖尿病、消化和肾脏疾病研究所(6800 万美元);国家环境卫生科学研究所(5800 万美元);以及 ODS(3200 万美元)。获得最多资金的膳食补充剂成分是植物药(22%)、维生素(20%)、脂类(14%)和矿物质及微量元素(10%)。研究最多的 3 个结果领域是癌症(占膳食补充剂总投资的 61%)、心血管疾病(47%)和女性生殖健康(38%)。在 2009、2010 和 2011 财年,ODS 分别提供了 NIH 膳食补充剂研究投资的 3.5%、3.6%和 4.1%。ODS 资金集中于细胞、酶或分子机制(占 ODS 资金总额的 64%)。本投资组合分析表明,NIH 已为膳食补充剂研究投入大量资金,以扩大对膳食补充剂功效和安全性的科学知识库。