| Literature DB >> 22254038 |
Robin M Daly1, Peter R Ebeling.
Abstract
Most current guidelines recommend that older adults and the elderly strive for a total calcium intake (diet and supplements) of 1,000 to 1,300 mg/day to prevent osteoporosis and fractures. Traditionally, calcium supplements have been considered safe, effective and well tolerated, but their safety has recently been questioned due to potential adverse effects on vascular disease which may increase mortality. For example, the findings from a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (currently published in abstract form only) revealed that the use of calcium supplements was associated with an ~30% increased risk of myocardial infarction. If high levels of calcium are harmful to health, this may alter current public health recommendations with regard to the use of calcium supplements for preventing osteoporosis. In this review, we provide an overview of the latest information from human observational and prospective studies, randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses related to the effects of calcium supplementation on vascular disease and related risk factors, including blood pressure, lipid and lipoprotein levels and vascular calcification.Entities:
Keywords: calcium supplementation; cardiovascular disease; elderly ; mortality
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22254038 PMCID: PMC3257663 DOI: 10.3390/nu2050505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Summary of the results from randomised controlled trials that evaluated the effects of calcium supplementation or combined calcium-vitamin D supplementation on cardiovascular related endpoints.
| Reference | Participants | Age | Intervention | Mean Dietary Ca | Mean Total Ca † | Duration | Primary Study Endpoint | Adverse event recording method | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baron
| 930 men and women (recent history of colorectal adenomas) | Mean 61 yrs | Calcium carbonate, 1200 mg/d (n = 464); placebo (n = 466). | Ca, 889 mg/d; placebo, 865 mg/d. | Ca, ~2089 mg/d | 4 yrs | Recurrent colorectal adenoma incidence | Hospitalized events | The number of participants hospitalized for cardiac events was no different between the Ca supplemented (n = 50, 11%) and placebo group (n = 46, 10%). Death rates were also similar between the groups (5% each in the calcium and placebo group). |
| Grant
| 5292 men and women | ≥70 yrs | Calcium carbonate, 1000 mg/d + vitamin D3, 800 IU/d (n = 1306); calcium carbonate, 1000 mg/d (n = 1311); vitamin D3, 1000 IU/d (n = 1343); placebo (n = 1332). | Not reported | - | 2 yrs to 62 months | Low energy trauma fracture incidence | Self reported adverse events, death. | No differences in death rates between the four groups: Ca+Vit D (16.9%); Vit D3 (16.2%); Ca (18.5%); placebo (16.3%), or the combined Ca
|
| Brazier
| 192 women | >65 yrs | Calcium carbonate, 1000 mg/d + vitamin D, 800 IU/d (n = 95); placebo (n = 96). | Ca + Vit D, 752 mg/d; placebo, 721 mg/d. | Ca + Vit D, ~1752 mg/d | 1 yr | Bone density, biochemical markers | Self reported and observed adverse events. | No difference in adverse cardiovascular events or death between the participants in the Ca+Vit D (n = 6) and placebo group (n = 5). |
| Prince
| 1460 women | >70 yrs | Calcium carbonate, 1200 mg/d (n = 730); placebo (n = 730). | Ca, 915 mg/d; placebo, 897 mg/d. | Ca, ~2115 mg/d | 5 yrs | Clinical incident fractures, vertebral deformity and adverse events | Self reported adverse events recorded in a dairy every 4 months. | Incident ischemic heart disease was no different between the Ca (56 participants, 7.7%) and placebo group (51 participants, 7.0%); HR, 1.12 (95% CI 0.77-1.64). |
| Hsia
| 36,282 postmenopausal women | 50 to 79 yrs | Calcium carbonate, 1000 mg/d + vitamin D3, 400 IU/d (n = 18,176); placebo (n = 18,106). | Diet and supplements; Ca, 1148 mg/d; placebo, 1154 mg/d. | Ca, ~2148 mg/d | 7 yrs | Fracture incidence | Medical review of self reported events; adjudicated by centrally trained physicians | No differences between the Ca+Vit D and placebo group for various CV events (RR): MI/CHD, 1.04 (95% CI 0.92, 1.18); MI, 1.05 (95% CI, 0.91, 1.20); CHD death, 1.01 (95% CI, 0.79, 1.29); stroke, 0.95 (95% CI, 0.83, 1.10); transient ischemic attack, 1.16 (95% CI, 0.95, 1.42). |
| Bolland
| 1471 postmenopausal women) | Mean 74 yrs | Calcium citrate, 1000 mg/d (n = 732); placebo (n = 739). | Ca, 861 mg/d; placebo, 853 mg/d. | Ca, ~1861 mg/d | 5 yrs | Bone density and fracture incidence | Self reported adverse events, review of hospital records and death certificates; search of national database of hospital admissions for CV events. | For verified vascular events, the RR in the Ca vs placebo groups were as follows: MI 1.49 (95% CI, 0.86, 2.57); stroke 1.37 (95% CI, 0.83, 2.28); sudden death 0.51 (95% CI, 0.13, 2.01); MI, stroke or sudden death 1.21 (95% CI, 0.84, 1.74). |
| Reid
| 323 men | ≥40 yrs | Calcium citrate, 1200 mg/d (n = 108); calcium citrate, 600 mg/d (n = 108); placebo (n = 107). | Ca (1200 mg/d), 930 mg/d; Ca (600 mg/d), 870 mg/d; placebo, 800 mg/d. | Ca (1200 mg/d), ~2130 mg/d; Ca (600 mg/d), ~1470 mg/d | 2 yrs | Bone density | Self reported adverse events. | No difference between Ca groups and placebo for composite vascular events (angina, MI, sudden death, coronary revascularization) (p = 0.24); Ca 1200 mg/d (n = 3); Ca 600 mg/d (n = 2), placebo (n = 0). |
| Lappe
| 1179 postmenopausal women | >55 yrs | Calcium citrate or carbonate (1400-1500 mg/d) + vitamin D (1000 IU/d) (n = 446); calcium (as above) + vitamin D placebo (n = 445); double placebo (n = 288). | Diet and supplements, mean Ca, 1072 mg/d. | Ca, ~2400 mg/d | 4 yrs | Fracture incidence | Self reported adverse events at 6 monthly intervals, which were then verified by the participants physician. | Vascular event rate in the two Ca treatment groups combined was no different from the placebo group (4.76 events/1000 person year
|
| Zhu
| 120 women | 70-80 yrs | Calcium carbonate, 1200 mg/d + vitamin D2, 1000 IU/d (n = 39); Calcium carbonate, 1200 mg/d + placebo vitamin D2 (n = 40), placebo calcium and vitamin D (n = 41) | Ca + vit D, 927 mg/d; Ca 1054 mg/d; placebo, 1046 mg/d. | Ca + Vit D, ~2127 mg/d; Ca, ~2254 mg/d | 5 yrs | Bone density and biochemical markers | Self reported adverse events | There were no significant differences among the three groups in the rate of incident vascular disease (data not reported). |
† Mean total calcium (Ca) intake represents the estimated intake based on the mean baseline dietary calcium intake combined with the dose of supplemental calcium used in the intervention.
Figure 1Summary of the relative risk for myocardial infarction (MI) and the composite endpoint of MI, stroke or sudden death based on self report, verified (reported events verified by a physician) and confirm events (includes verified events and events obtained from the New Zealand national database on hospital admissions) in healthy postmenopausal women in the calcium supplementation compared to placebo group involved in the Auckland Calcium Study [20].