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Omega-3 Fatty Acid Status Enhances the Prevention of Cognitive Decline by B Vitamins in Mild Cognitive Impairment.

Abderrahim Oulhaj, Fredrik Jernerén, Helga Refsum, A David Smith, Celeste A de Jager
RCT Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD 2016 128 件の引用
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

研究タイプ
Randomized Controlled Trial
対象集団
Elderly with mild cognitive impairment (VITACOG)
期間
104 weeks
介入
Omega-3 Fatty Acid Status Enhances the Prevention of Cognitive Decline by B Vitamins in Mild Cognitive Impairment. B vitamins (folic acid, B6, B12)
比較対照
placebo
主要アウトカム
cognitive decline rate (MMSE, TICS-m)
効果の方向
Positive
バイアスリスク
Low

Abstract

A randomized trial (VITACOG) in people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) found that B vitamin treatment to lower homocysteine slowed the rate of cognitive and clinical decline. We have used data from this trial to see whether baseline omega-3 fatty acid status interacts with the effects of B vitamin treatment. 266 participants with MCI aged ≥70 years were randomized to B vitamins (folic acid, vitamins B6 and B12) or placebo for 2 years. Baseline cognitive test performance, clinical dementia rating (CDR) scale, and plasma concentrations of total homocysteine, total docosahexaenoic and eicosapentaenoic acids (omega-3 fatty acids) were measured. Final scores for verbal delayed recall, global cognition, and CDR sum-of-boxes were better in the B vitamin-treated group according to increasing baseline concentrations of omega-3 fatty acids, whereas scores in the placebo group were similar across these concentrations. Among those with good omega-3 status, 33% of those on B vitamin treatment had global CDR scores >0 compared with 59% among those on placebo. For all three outcome measures, higher concentrations of docosahexaenoic acid alone significantly enhanced the cognitive effects of B vitamins, while eicosapentaenoic acid appeared less effective. When omega-3 fatty acid concentrations are low, B vitamin treatment has no effect on cognitive decline in MCI, but when omega-3 levels are in the upper normal range, B vitamins interact to slow cognitive decline. A clinical trial of B vitamins combined with omega-3 fatty acids is needed to see whether it is possible to slow the conversion from MCI to AD.

要約

Data from this trial is used to see whether baseline omega-3 fatty acid status interacts with the effects of B vitamin treatment, and higher concentrations of docosahexaenoic acid alone significantly enhanced the cognitive effects ofB vitamins, while eicosapentaenoic acids appeared less effective.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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