Nov. 26 - Vitamin E Could Help 40% of Diabetics Ward Off Heart
Attacks
Vitamin E supplements can significantly reduce
the risk of heart attacks and related deaths for diabetics who
carry a particular version of a gene, according to researchers
at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology and the Clalit
Health Services in Israel.
After 18 months of treatment, people with the
haptoglobin (Hp) 2-2 gene who took 400 International Units (IU)
of vitamin E daily had more than 50% fewer heart attacks,
strokes, and related deaths than Hp 2-2 patients who took a
placebo pill. 40% of individuals with diabetes carry the Hp
2-2 gene.
The researchers will present the results on
November 5 at the American Heart Meetings in Orlando, Florida.
The full study will appear in the November 21 online edition
of the journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and
Vascular Biology.
Most of the difference came from the reduced
number of heart attacks among those taking vitamin E. In the
group of 1,434 Hp 2-2 individuals taking part in the study,
seven people had a heart attack, compared to 17 who did not
take the vitamin. Dr. Andrew Levy, of the Technion Faculty of
Medicine, said there were no side effects observed in patients
who took vitamin E.
The study suggests that genetic testing for
the Hp 2-2 gene “may be useful to identify a large group
of diabetes individuals who could potentially derive cardiovascular
benefit from a very inexpensive treatment,” Levy said.
The finding is a new answer to an old question:
can antioxidant vitamins such as vitamin E help prevent heart
disease? Previously, cardiologists routinely prescribed vitamin
E for their patients, but the practice has dwindled as several
major studies in the past decade showed no heart-protective
effects and potential harm from vitamin E mega-doses.
However, Levy and colleagues suspected that
there might be one group of patients who could benefit from
vitamin E: diabetic individuals with a particular variant of
the haptoglobin gene. Haptoglobin is a powerful antioxidant
protein that stabilizes the iron-rich red blood cell molecule
called hemoglobin, preventing inflammation in the walls of arteries.
There are several versions of the haptoglobin
gene. In previous studies, Levy and colleagues showed that Hp
2-2 is an inferior antioxidant compared to its genetic siblings,
and that this difference is exaggerated in patients with diabetes.
The researchers also discovered that diabetic patients with
Hp 2-2 are two-to-three times more likely than other diabetics
to suffer a cardiovascular event such as a heart attack.
“This version of the gene does not determine
whether or not an individual will develop diabetes but rather
whether an individual with diabetes is susceptible to developing
the devastating complications associated with diabetes such
as heart disease, kidney disease or visual loss,” Levy
noted.
A genetic test for Hp 2-2 is commercially available,
said Levy, who is also a consultant for Synvista Therapeutics,
which owns a patent on the use of Hp testing to predict diabetic
complications.
By making a kit, the group hopes to considerably
lower the price of testing. According to Levy, the test would
cost about $30 and only have to be done only once.
Source: American Technion Society
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