There is no convincing evidence that taking high doses of selenium - a popular dietary supplement - can prevent cancer, according to a new review.
Background:Selenium is a mineral that is essential for humans, and is also present in soil and rocks. While daily selenium recommendations from the United States and World Health Organization vary between 30 and 55 micrograms per day for adults, some companies that sell the supplements claim that higher doses have a range of health benefits, including cancer prevention. While selenium is not widely used in Europe, many Americans are known to take the supplement in the hope of decreasing the risk of cancer. Selenium supplements are about $2 for a month's supply. A number of recent trials now have raised questions about the use of selenium, questioning such beneficial effects.
The new study:
According to James Marshall, of the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, the excitement about selenium began with evidence that people with very low selenium in their diet are at an increased risk for cancer. Previous studies had shown that for those adults who do not reach the recommended intake with their diet per day, additional selenium via supplements may be beneficial.
To try to get a better focus on that picture for cancer in particular, an international team of researchers around Gabriele Dennert of the Institute for Transdisciplinary Health Research in Berlin analyzed 55 studies on the link between selenium and different types of cancer. Their review is published in the Cochrane Library, a publication of the Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates medical research.
Most of reports evaluated by this group were so-called "observational studies" - scientists measured how much selenium people ate every day or how much they had in their blood or toenails, then tracked who got cancer over the next few years.
The remaining 6 studies were done through more rigorous trials, in which researchers randomly divided participants into one group that took selenium supplements for a month or more, and another that took a drug-free placebo pill or nothing - then followed them for cancer. These kinds of studies are thought to be better at accounting for outside factors that may affect cancer risk.
The observational studies suggested that talking selenium may be linked to a slightly lower risk of cancer - more so in men than women.
But in the randomized trials, people assigned to take selenium at doses at least four times higher than the daily recommendation were not less likely to get cancer - prostate cancer and skin cancer, in particular - than those not taking selenium. Even worse, according to the review, the overconsumption of selenium from long-term use of selenium supplements may actually lead to increased health risks.
This is not good news for all those who believe to reduce their cancer risks by enhancing their selenium intake through supplements.
The new review G. Dennert, M. Zwahlen, M. Brinkman, M. Vinceti, M.P.A. Zeegers, M. Horneber,
Selenium for preventing cancer, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2011, Issue 5. Art. No.: CD005195.
DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD005195.pub2. Related EVISA Resources Link Database: Selenium and Human health Link Database; Research projects related to selenium Related EVISA News (newest first)
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last time modified: May 17, 2024