Omega-3's No Help For Crohn's Sufferers
Main Category: Crohn's / IBDAlso Included In: Complementary Medicine / Alternative Medicine
Article Date: 09 Apr 2008 - 3:00 PST
An international study led by Dr. Brian Feagan of Robarts Research Institute at The University of Western Ontario in London, Canada has found that omega-3 fatty acids are ineffective for managing Crohn's disease. The research is published in the April 9 Journal of the American Medical Association.
"A significant amount of time and money is spent annually on alternative therapies such as Omega-3 fatty acids, without strong evidence that they are beneficial to patients with inflammatory bowel disease," says gastroenterologist Dr. Feagan, who is Director of Robarts Clinical Trials and lead author on the study. "I encourage Crohn's patients to focus on prescription medications that we know are effective for preventing relapse of disease, such as azathioprine, methotrexate, and TNF blockers."
Found in fatty fish such as salmon, mackerel, herring and sardines, omega-3 fatty acids have an anti-inflammatory effect and are therefore used in the treatment of inflammatory disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis and IgA nephropathy (a kidney disease).
The widespread belief among patients and health care providers that omega-3 fatty acids are effective treatment for inflammatory bowel disease may have stemmed from a relatively small Italian research study, published in 1996 in the New England Journal of Medicine, which found a benefit for preventing relapse of Crohn's disease.
"Small, single centre clinical trials often overestimate the true effects of treatment" says Dr. Feagan. "That's why it is important to conduct large-scale, randomized, multi-centre studies in order to confirm preliminary results."
Feagan's study includes two large-scale trials involving 738 Crohn's patients (ten times the number of patients involved in the original New England study) at clinical centres in Europe, Israel, Canada, and the United States from January 2003 to February 2007. Both trials demonstrated that the omega-3 fatty acid formulation offered no benefit in preventing relapse in Crohn's disease. However, patients who took the omega-3 fatty acid preparation did have significantly lower concentrations of triglycerides, a high level of which is a risk factor for heart disease.
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Source:
Kathy Wallis
University of Western Ontario
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MLA
13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/103320.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/103320.php.
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Misleading Information Reported And Important Information Ignored By Doctor
posted by Suspicious on 23 Jun 2008 at 2:28 pmThe actual numbers generated from this study are:
"In the first trial, the one-year relapse rate was:
32 per cent for those who took omega-3
36 per cent for those who took a placebo
In the second trial, the one-year relapse rate was:
48 per cent among those who took omega-3
49 per cent for those who took a placebo"
In other words 68% did NOT relapse in the first trial and 52% did NOT relapse in the second trial. In the face of that information how does a competent doctor cast Omega 3s as utterly useless for Crohn's, regardless of the placebo results? Did he bother to analyse why there was no relapse in a majority of the people on fish oil in both trials? How does he know for sure that the relapse rates of those on fish oil would not have been higher if not for the fish oil? Not every treatment works equally well for all people on the treatment!
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