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  Vol. 298 No. 4, July 25, 2007 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Antioxidant Supplements and Mortality

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

To the Editor: Based on their meta-analysis of antioxidant supplementation trials, Dr Bjelakovic and colleagues1 conclude that some of the intervention nutrients appeared to be associated with increased mortality. Particular aspects of their approach, analysis, and reported findings may have led to incomplete or biased determinations of the real effect of such nutrients in various populations.

Although vitamin A is related to beta carotene (and other provitamin A carotenoids) by virtue of its in vivo formation through oxidative cleavage of the latter, it is not considered an antioxidant nutrient.2 Its primary inclusion in the meta-analysis, except as an eligible trial cosupplement, is therefore surprising, with specific implications for the 2 trials that tested vitamin A only. Controlled trials of several other nonantioxidant vitamins could have been similarly included in the analysis along with those testing vitamin A.

Nearly half of the studies originally identified from the literature (405 of 815) . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Demetrius Albanes, MD
daa@nih.gov
Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics
National Cancer Institute
Bethesda, Maryland


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Antioxidant Supplements and Mortality
Han-Yao Huang, Steven Teutsch, and Eric Bass
JAMA. 2007;298(4):400-401.
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Antioxidant Supplements and Mortality—Reply
Lise Lotte Gluud, Goran Bjelakovic, Dimitrinka Nikolova, Rosa G. Simonetti, and Christian Gluud
JAMA. 2007;298(4):402-403.
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RELATED ARTICLE

Mortality in Randomized Trials of Antioxidant Supplements for Primary and Secondary Prevention: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Goran Bjelakovic, Dimitrinka Nikolova, Lise Lotte Gluud, Rosa G. Simonetti, and Christian Gluud
JAMA. 2007;297(8):842-857.
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