Posted on 12/07/2007 7:09:20 PM PST by neverdem
ORLANDO Vitamin E has finally fulfilled its promise as an antioxidant that can slow the progression of cardiovascular disease.
Patients with diabetes who also had the haptoglobin 22 genotype and who were treated with 400 IU of vitamin E daily for 18 months had about half the incidence of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, and stroke, compared with patients who received placebo in a study with 1,434 patients that was done in Israel, Dr. Shany Blum reported at the annual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.
Further analysis showed that the benefit was concentrated in patients with poorly controlled diabetesthose with a hemoglobin (HbA1c) level of at least 7.0%, said Dr. Blum, a cardiologist at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa.
Haptoglobin is an antioxidant protein that blocks hemoglobin-induced tissue oxidation. Humans have two different haptoglobin alleles, 1 and 2. The protein that's made in people who carry the Hp 11 or 21 genotype has normal antioxidant activity. The protein that's made in people who have an Hp 22 genotype is a much less effective antioxidant. The poor activity of the Hp 22 protein seems to be exacerbated when it tries to block glycosylated hemoglobin, Dr. Blum said in an interview. Vitamin E seems to supply the antioxidant activity that's missing in people with the Hp 22 genotype.
Genotyping for the haptoglobin alleles is easily done. In the United States, the prevalence of the Hp 22 genotype is about 36% in both whites and African Americans. The prevalence is much higher in certain other populations, reaching about 85% in people of Southeast Asian ancestry, said Dr. Andrew P. Levy, also a cardiologist at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology and the senior author of the study.
A simplified and inexpensive haptoglobin genotyping kit is being developed by a U.S. company, Synvista Therapeutics Inc. The current study was supported by the Kennedy Leigh Charitable Trust, London, and received no commercial funding. Dr. Levy is a consultant to Synvista Therapeutics.
The study enrolled 3,054 people with type 2 diabetes aged 55 or older who were patients in the primary health care clinics of the Clalit Health Services in Israel. All patients underwent haptoglobin genotyping, which identified 1,434 of the patients (47%) as carriers of the Hp 22 genotype. This subgroup was then randomized to receive 400 IU vitamin E daily or placebo, and the patients were followed for 18 months.
The patients who received vitamin E had a significantly lower incidence of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, and stroke. The event rate in the vitamin E-treated patients was very similar to the event rate in the remaining 1,620 patients who had Hp 11 and Hp 21 genotypes and who received no investigational treatment.
A second analysis divided the Hp 22 patients based on their HbA1c levels. Patients with an HbA1c level of less than 7.0% who received vitamin E had about a 1.5% event rate. Patients with an HbA1c level of less than 7.0% treated with placebo had an event rate of 3.4%. Among the patients with an HbA1c level of 7.0% or greater, those treated with vitamin E had a 2.9% event rate, and those treated with placebo had a 6.2% event rate.
No interaction between HbA1c levels and the rate of cardiovascular events was seen in the patients with the Hp 11 and Hp 21 genotypes, Dr. Blum said. Results from other studies also have shown no relationship between haptoglobin genotypes and cardiovascular risk in people without diabetes. However, patients with type 1 diabetes seem to behave the same way as the type 2 patients in the current study, Dr. Levy said.
A larger study that is being planned will enroll patients entirely in the United States, Dr. Levy said.
Next year they will release a study saying Vitamin E causes diabetes.
All together now - LET'S PANIC!!!!
Not even a mention whether the ‘Vitamin E’ was natural or synthetic.
At least here they found a genetic explanation why in other studies of Vitamin E they find no benefit, or they find some benefit, but say it wasn’t significant. I don’t think we know all we need to learn about genetics, epigenetics, copy number variation, etc., not by a long shot.
Plus it has become clear that there are more than 2 forms of diabetes.
Those are links to relevant articles by Dr. Blum. If you can't find free copies on the net, you'll have to buy them to find the materials and methods.
Maturity Onset Diabetes of the Young, MODY, and gestational diabetes I consider as variants of type II, Adult Onset Diabetes Mellitis.
I would point out here that it’s pretty much impossible to get 400 IU of Vitamin E from diet unless you drink sunflower oil by the liter. Supplements would be necessary.
Sorry, I should have said adult onset type II. We have several sorts running around in my extended family.
What I was trying to get at is that there are several phenotypic so-to-say diseases that are clearly becoming identifiable as disease clusters or complexes or whatever the medical term would be. A similar thing is happening with some organisms: we are finding them to be phenotypically identical, but genetically sufficiently different so as to be unable to reproduce.
What's apparant here is that one variant of a quite ordinary gene doesn't work well under the wrong environment and needs the assistance of Vitamin E.
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