Ml. Neuhouser et al., Dietary supplement use in the prostate cancer prevention trial: Implications for prevention trials, NUTR CANCER, 39(1), 2001, pp. 12-18
Nutrients included in commonly used dietary supplements, such as vitamins C
and E, may affect cancer risk. To better understand how supplement use may
affect the interpretation of cancer prevention trials, we examined dietary
supplement use among participants in the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial,
a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of the drug finasteride (Proscar)
for the primary prevention of prostate cancer. Of 15,387 men who completed
food frequency questionnaires and dietary supplement questionnaires, 44.3%
used a multivitamin, 35% used single supplements of vitamin C or E, and 10
-15% used antioxidant mixtures or single supplements of vitamins A and D, z
inc, or beta -carotene at least three times per week. The strongest correla
tes of supplement use were higher education and lower body mass index (p <
0.001), and whites and Asians were more likely to use multivitamins and sin
gle supplements of vitamins C and E than were blacks and Hispanics. Supplem
ent users obtained 87% of their total daily vitamin E intake, 61-64% of vit
amins A, C, and D, and about half of beta -carotene, folate, and zinc from
supplements. Because supplements, especially antioxidants, may confer indep
endent cancer-preventive effects, analytic models of study findings should
include exposure measurement of dietary supplements with appropriate tests
for interaction. Our results can be generalized to similar chemoprevention
trials.