By The Editors of Consumer
Reports
Mon, Aug 06, 2012
Mon, Aug 06, 2012
More
than half of American adults take vitamins, minerals, herbs, or other
nutritional supplements. Some of those products aren’t especially helpful, readers
told us in a recent survey, but that aside, don’t assume they’re safe because
they’re “all natural.” They may be neither. Here are 10 hazards that we’ve
distilled from interviews with experts, published research, and our own
analysis of reports of serious adverse events submitted to the Food and Drug
Administration, which we obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request.
Read and be warned.
1. Supplements are not risk-free
More
than 6,300 reports of serious adverse events associated with dietary
supplements, including vitamins and herbs, streamed into the FDA from
supplement companies, consumers, health-care providers, and others between 2007
and mid-April of 2012. The reports by themselves don’t prove the supplements
caused the problems, but the raw numbers are cause for some concern. Symptoms
included signs of heart, kidney, or liver problems, aches, allergic reactions,
fatigue, nausea, pains, and vomiting.
The
reports described more than 10,300 serious outcomes (some included more than
one), including 115 deaths and more than 2,100 hospitalizations, 1,000 serious
injuries or illnesses, 900 emergency-room visits, and some 4,000 other
important medical events.
The
FDA gets far more reports about serious problems with prescription medication
than about supplements. But there’s a big difference between the two, notes
Pieter Cohen, M.D., an internist at Cambridge Health Alliance in Massachusetts with a special interest in supplements.
“These powerful medications with powerful side effects are actually saving
lives when used appropriately,” he says of prescription drugs. “But when
healthy consumers use supplements, there’s rarely, if ever, a powerful
lifesaving effect.”
The
FDA suspects most supplement problems never come to its attention, says Daniel
Fabricant, Ph.D., director of the agency’s Division of Dietary Supplement
Programs. But those that do are still useful because they can raise red flags
about a developing problem. For instance, last year the agency noted seven
reports of serious health problems regarding consumers who took Soladek vitamin
solution, marketed by Indo Pharma of the Dominican Republic. When the FDA learned that tested
samples contained vitamins A and D at concentrations many times the recommended
daily allowances, it issued a consumer warning.
Why
not simply order a problem product off the market? Current laws make that so
difficult for the FDA that to date it has banned only one ingredient, ephedrine
alkaloids. That effort dragged on for a decade, during which ephedra weight-loss
products were implicated in thousands of adverse events, including deaths.
Type
the name of the supplement you’re interested in into the search box at
www.fda.gov to see whether it has been subject to warnings, alerts, or
voluntary recalls. If you suspect you’re having a bad reaction to a supplement,
tell your doctor. You can also report your problem to the FDA at 800-332-1088
or www.fda.gov/medwatch.
2. Some supplements are really prescription drugs
Fabricant
has said that dietary supplements spiked with prescription drugs are “the
largest threat” to consumer safety. Since 2008 there have been recalls of more
than 400 such products, mostly those marketed for bodybuilding, sexual
enhancement, and weight loss, according to the FDA.
We’ve
seen many recalled products that have contained the same or similar active
ingredients as prescription drugs, such as sildenafil (Viagra), tadalafil
(Cialis), and sibutramine (Meridia, a weight-loss drug that was withdrawn from
the market in 2010 because of evidence that it increased the risk of heart
attacks and strokes). Others contained synthetic steroids.
Those
adulterated products can cause some of the same side effects and interactions
that consumers may have been trying to avoid by choosing supplements over
drugs. The FDA has received reports of strokes, acute liver injury, kidney
failure, pulmonary embolism (blood clots in the lung), and death associated
with drug-tainted supplements.
“A
number of the spiked sexual enhancement products claim to work within 20 to 45
minutes,” Fabricant said on the FDA’s website. “When we see a product that
makes claims above and beyond what a dietary supplement might do—above
supporting health—and within a time frame of a few minutes, it tips us off that
we might have a spiked product.”
Slim
down with diet and exercise. Build muscles by weight training. And consult a
doctor if you need help in the bedroom, since it could indicate an underlying
health problem. If you suspect you’ve purchased a product that is tainted with
undeclared prescription drugs or steroids, send an e-mail about it to the FDA,
at taintedproducts@fda.hhs.gov.
3. You can overdose on vitamins and minerals
Unless
your health-care provider tells you that you need more than 100 percent of the
recommended daily intake of a particular nutrient, you probably don’t.
“It
doesn’t make sense to me to take huge doses of vitamins and minerals unless
there’s a diagnosed problem, because there is so little evidence that they do
good and sometimes a possibility that they might do harm,” says Marion Nestle,
M.P.H., Ph.D., a professor of nutrition, food studies, and public health at New
York University.
Megadoses
of the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K can cause problems, and even some
standard doses may interfere with certain prescription medicine. Some people
may experience adverse effects from too much calcium or iron.
The
table below shows the maximum daily intake of key nutrients that the Institute of Medicine has determined is unlikely to pose a
risk of adverse health effects. (The numbers apply to the general population,
not to those who may need supplementation because of a medical condition.)
It’s
surprisingly easy to overdo it. For instance, a 50-something woman who’s
worried about her bones might eat a breakfast of Whole Grain Total cereal,
which contains around 1,000 milligrams of calcium per serving, with a half-cup
of skim milk (150 milligrams of calcium), and take a calcium supplement (500
milligrams) on top of her One-A-Day Menopause Formula multivitamin, which includes
300 milligrams of calcium. She’d already be coming close to the upper tolerable
daily calcium limit of 2,000 milligrams.
Using
information from the labels on the supplements and food you routinely consume,
add up your total daily exposure to everything, and then check the related
table to see whether you’re overdoing it. If your doctor says you need more of
a specific nutrient than you can get from food (or sun exposure, in the case of
vitamin D), a single-ingredient pill may be sufficient.
4. You can’t depend on warning labels
For
one thing, the FDA doesn’t require them on supplements. There is an exception:
Supplements that contain iron must warn about accidental overdosing and fatal
poisoning in children.
But
supplement makers can provide warning labels if they want to. We went shopping
to see what warnings, if any, we would find on labels from 14 varieties of
supplements. After looking at 233 products, all purchased online or in stores
in the New
York City metropolitan area in the spring of 2012, we can report that the
only thing consistent about the labels is their lack of consistency.
Good
news first: 100 percent of the 15 brands we bought that contained iron had the
required warning.
Of
the 233 labels we examined, most included only general warnings, such as those
about not using the product during pregnancy or nursing, or about possible
unspecified drug interactions. But specific warnings were rarer. Forty percent
of labels warned people against taking the supplement if they had a medical
condition, but only some cited an ailment, such as a bleeding disorder; 36
percent warned of possible adverse reactions; but only 13 percent warned of
possible interactions with a specific drug or type of drug.
Five
of our 20 samples of 5-HTP, a mood and sleep supplement, carried warnings about
a possible interaction with drugs for Parkinson’s disease.
While
it’s known that St. John’s wort can reduce the effectiveness of certain prescription
drugs, including birth-control pills and blood thinners such as warfarin (Coumadin),
only two of the 17 samples of it we purchased warned explicitly about those
hazards. Ginkgo biloba can also interfere with blood thinners, but we saw a
warning about that possible interaction on just one bottle of ginkgo.
“Some
companies go with an overabundance of caution, and that’s certainly their right
to do that,” says Steve Mister, president and CEO of the Council for
Responsible Nutrition, a leading industry trade group. “Other companies say,
you know what, I’m not going to warn for possible things that I don’t believe
are a serious concern to my consumers.”
Make
sure that your doctor or pharmacist knows what supplements and prescription
drugs you are taking or thinking of taking. You can also learn about
interactions in our free “Guide: 100+ Commonly Used Supplements” (funded by a
grant from the Airborne Cy Pres Fund).
5. None are proved to cure major diseases
If
you’re surfing the Internet for dietary supplements and find a site that claims
its products can diagnose, cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent a disease, surf
right off to another site. Such claims are off-limits to supplements, according
to the FDA. “We’d like to see those things go away,” Fabricant says. “Those are
a direct threat to public health.” Since 2007, the agency has sent dozens of
warning letters to companies telling them to stop making those types of claims
about their supplement products.
Earlier
this year, for instance, the FDA sent a warning letter to BioAnue Laboratories
of Rochelle, Ga., when these statements and others were spotted on websites:
“Formula CX will reverse wasting disease,” and “Bovine cartilage stops tumor
growth.” (The FDA said it’s still reviewing the company’s response. The
president of BioAnue Laboratories told us it “complies with all U.S. laws.”)
Over
the past decade, the FDA’s regulatory partner, the Federal Trade Commission,
which monitors dietary-supplement advertising, has brought more than 100 legal
challenges to claims about the effectiveness of supplements.
Research
supplements at reliable government sites such as the Food and Drug
Administration, the National Institutes of Health’s Office of Dietary
Supplements, and the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
6. Buy with caution from botánicas
These
stores, which sell traditional medicinal plants and other artifacts for
physical and spiritual healing, are a valued presence in Hispanic neighborhoods
in many American cities. But when Consumer Reports sent a Spanish-speaking
reporter on a shopping trip to several New York-area botánicas in 2011, he came
away with incomplete information and bags of mystery herbs.
Our
reporter asked for advice on how to treat type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure,
and impotence, conditions that have effective conventional drug treatments.
Healers offered a variety of instructions and herbs, but none volunteered
relevant facts about possible side effects or the risky interactions that can
occur when an herb is taken with a medication. And when we brought the herbs
back to the office and checked the scientific evidence, we found that
conclusive research on efficacy and safety was lacking for all of them.
Our
investigation left us concerned about product quality and identity at the
shops. And experts we consulted suggested that the supply chain used by some of
the stores might not follow the best industry standards.
“These
markets should not be singled out, but they also should not be exempt from
meeting the same standards required by other purveyors of herbal and dietary
supplements,” says Tieraona Low Dog, M.D., a clinical associate professor of
medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine and fellowship
director of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine.
Check
with your doctor before taking traditional herbs, and make sure you know what
they are and where they come from. If your culture’s health practices are
important to you, consider seeking out an integrative physician, such as Low
Dog, who combines conventional medical care with holistic and traditional
methods.
7. Heart and cancer protection are not proved
Omega-3
pills and antioxidants are widely thought to reduce the risk of heart disease
and cancer, respectively, and millions of women take calcium to protect their
bones. But recent evidence casts doubt on whether those supplements are as safe
or effective as assumed.
Calcium. The
latest blow against calcium supplements was a report by German and Swiss
researchers who followed almost 24,000 adults for an average of 11 years. They
found that regular users of calcium supplements had an 86 percent increased
heart-attack risk compared with those who didn’t use supplements, as reported
in the June 2012 issue of the journal Heart. On the other hand, there was a
statistically significant 30 percent reduction of heart-attack risk among adults
with a moderately high intake of calcium from food itself.
Why
the disparity? The researchers theorized that the supplements may cause quick
spikes in blood calcium levels that have been linked to risky lipid levels,
whereas calcium in food is likely to be absorbed more slowly. Get calcium from
dairy products, green leafy vegetables, and fish with edible bones, such as
sardines.
Omega-3 fish oil. The widely held view that fish-oil pills
help prevent cardiovascular disease hit a snag when a study of 12,500 people
with diabetes or prediabetes and a high risk of heart attack or stroke found no
difference in the death rate from cardiovascular disease or other outcomes
between those given a 1-gram fish-oil pill every day and those given a placebo,
according to a June 11, 2012, New England Journal of Medicine online report.
But the results may be clouded by the fact that participants were already
taking other heart medication.
Most
people can get enough omega-3s by eating fatty fish at least twice a week. The
American Heart Association says that people who have coronary artery disease
may want to talk to their doctor about omega-3 supplementation.
Antioxidants. Far from reducing cancer risk, as a lot
of people believe, high doses of some antioxidant supplements may actually
increase it, evidence suggests.
The
discouraging news appeared in the May 16, 2012, issue of the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute. Based on current evidence, vitamins C and E haven’t been
found to shield people from cancer; vitamin E, beta-carotene, and vitamin C
don’t seem to protect against getting or dying from cancer; selenium doesn’t
prevent prostate cancer; and there’s no convincing evidence that beta-carotene
or vitamin A, C, or E supplements prevent gastrointestinal cancers. Still
worse, the researchers wrote, “Some clinical trials show that some of these
antioxidant nutrients may increase cancer risk.”
And
there’s more bad news, from a study of 35,000 men reported in the Oct.
12, 2011, issue
of the Journal of the American Medical Association: Daily vitamin E
supplementation may increase the risk of prostate cancer among healthy men.
The
investigators warned that the implications of their findings were worrisome
given that more than half of people 60 or older take supplements containing
vitamin E. Moreover, 23 percent of them take at least 400 IU per day despite a
recommended daily dietary allowance of only 22 IU for adult men.
Lay
off the antioxidant supplements and reduce your cancer risk safely by quitting
smoking, avoiding excessive drinking, and eating a healthy diet that includes
plenty of fruit, vegetables, nuts, legumes, and whole grains.
8. Pills can irritate the esophagus
Choking
as a serious symptom showed up surprisingly often in the database we analyzed
of problem reports to the FDA in the last five years, with more than 900
mentions. But true cases of choking, in which a pill actually goes down the
windpipe instead of the esophagus, probably happen infrequently, says Joel
Blumin, M.D., incoming chairman of the Airway and Swallowing Committee of the
American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery. That’s a medical
emergency that requires immediate intervention, such as the Heimlich maneuver.
More
typically, Blumin says, pills irritate the esophagus, causing a muscle spasm,
or get physically stuck or slowed. “That sensation feels like choking,” he
says, but it isn’t. Sometimes all you need is a second swallow or extra water
to get the pill down.
To
get a pill down easily, first take a swig of water to moisten your mouth and
throat. Place the pill on the front of your tongue, take a sip of water, tilt
your head back slightly, and swallow. Then drink the rest of the water to help
propel the pill down your esophagus. People with persistent swallowing problems
can switch to liquid or chewable formulations and should probably seek
evaluation by an otolaryngologist.
9. Some ‘natural’ products are anything but
Vitamin
pills can be synthetically, and legally, produced in a lab. Synthetic
ingredients are even allowed in multivitamins that bear the Department of
Agriculture’s “Organic” seal. But the FDA has said that synthetic copies of
botanicals don’t qualify as dietary-supplement ingredients at all.
“Vitamins
can be synthetic because, by definition, a vitamin doesn’t have to come from
nature,” says Fabricant at the FDA. They just have to perform the biological
activity of vitamins, he added, whereas a “botanical” means that it was alive
at some point. In other words, botanicals and their extracts must come from
actual living plants, not a test tube.
In
April 2012, the agency sent warning letters to 10 manufacturers and
distributors of products containing dimethylamylamine (DMAA), often touted as a
natural stimulant. It said the ingredient lacked safety evidence and warned
that synthetically produced DMAA was not a dietary ingredient at all. (The FDA
said it is studying the companies’ responses.)
The
FDA doesn’t require supplements to go through rigorous testing for safety and
efficacy the way that drugs are tested. If you choose to take vitamins,
botanicals, or other supplements, look for those with the “USP Verified” mark,
which means they meet standards of quality, purity, and potency set by the
nonprofit U.S. Pharmacopeia.
10. You may not need supplements at all
If
you are already getting the recommended amount of nutrients by eating a variety
of fruit, vegetables, cereals, dairy, and protein, there’s little if any
additional benefit from ingesting nutritional supplements. Here’s our take on
five top-selling vitamins, plus multis:
Vitamin A. Few people in the U.S. are outright deficient in vitamin A. The retinol form—which comes from animal
sources such as eggs, liver, and whole milk—is more readily absorbed than
beta-carotene, but even strict vegetarians can usually meet their needs by
eating five servings a day of produce, including dark green leafy vegetables
and orange and yellow fruit. Too much retinol can cause birth defects and liver
abnormalities, and might harm bones.
B vitamins. Most people get plenty through their diet. Exceptions include vegetarians, who
might need extra B12, which is found in animal-derived foods; the estimated 10
to 30 percent of people over 50 who don’t have enough stomach acid to extract
B12 from food; and women who are pregnant or trying to get pregnant, who should
take 400 micrograms a day of extra folic acid to help prevent birth defects.
Vitamin C. There’s some evidence that 200 milligrams
or more of vitamin C a day might improve cold symptoms in smokers and seniors,
though it won’t prevent colds. Vitamin C can enhance iron absorption, so avoid
high doses if you have hemochromatosis, a condition in which the body
absorbs and stores too much iron.
Vitamin D. If you get some midday sun exposure during the warmer months
and regularly consume vitamin D-rich foods, such as fatty fish, eggs, and
fortified dairy products, you probably don’t need to take a supplement. People
who are middle-aged or older, are overweight, or have darker skin might need
supplements. If you’re unsure about your vitamin D status, ask your doctor
about having a blood test.
Vitamin E. Two analyses have linked as little as 400
IU a day to a small but statistically significant increase in mortality. Moreover, vitamin E may inhibit blood
clotting, so it shouldn’t be taken with blood thinners.
MULTIVITAMINS. Large clinical trials have repeatedly
found that multivitamins don’t improve the health of the average person. People who might need a multivitamin
include women who are pregnant, breast-feeding, or trying to conceive; dieters
consuming fewer than 1,200 calories a day or cutting out an entire food group
(carbs, for example); and those with medical conditions that affect digestion
and food absorption.
WARNINGS WE LIKE TO SEE: Makers of nutritional supplements have no
legal obligation to put warnings about possible drug interactions on their
products, but nothing’s stopping them if they want to. St. John’s wort is especially prone to drug
interactions, and most of the 17 St. John’s wort product labels we reviewed did
contain a general warning or named specific drugs or drug classes. One of the
most complete set of warnings we saw was on a Vitamin Shoppe bottle. The
warning does a good job of alerting users to the herb’s important
interactions with anti-HIV medication, blood thinners, oral contraceptives,
prescription antidepressants, and transplant drugs.
Nutrient
|
Recommended daily intake
|
|
Safe upper limit (all sources)
|
|
MEN
|
WOMEN
|
|
Vitamin A
|
3,000 IU
|
2,300 IU
|
10,000 IU
|
Niacin (B3)
|
16 mg
|
14 mg
|
35 mg
|
Folate (folic acid)
|
400 mcg
|
400 mcg
|
1,000 mcg
|
Vitamin C
|
90 mg
|
75 mg
|
2,000 mg
|
Vitamin D
|
600 IU ages 19 to 70; 800
IU ages 71 and up
|
600 IU ages 19 to 70; 800
IU ages 71 and up
|
|
Vitamin E
|
22 IU (natural)
33 IU (synthetic
|
22 IU (natural)
33 IU (synthetic
|
1,500
IU (natural)
1,100
IU (synthetic)
|
Vitamin K
|
120 mcg
|
90 mcg
|
Not established
|
MINERALS
|
|
|
|
Calcium
|
1,000 mg ages 19 to 70; 1,200
mg ages 70 and up
|
1,000 mg ages 19 to 50; 1,200
mg ages 51 and up
|
2,500 mg through
age 50; 2,000 mg ages 51 and up
|
Magnesium
|
420 mg
|
320 mg
|
350 mg (from
supplements only)
|
Potassium
|
4,700 mg
|
4,700 mg
|
Not established
|
Selenium
|
55 mcg
|
55 mcg
|
400 mcg
|
Zinc
|
11 mg
|
8 mg
|
40 mg
|
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