| Literature DB >> 30186176 |
Kok-Yong Chin1, Soelaiman Ima-Nirwana1.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis is a debilitating disease of the joint involving cartilage degeneration and chondrocytes apoptosis. Oxidative stress is one of the many proposed mechanisms underpinning joint degeneration in osteoarthritis. The current pharmacotherapies emphasize pain and symptomatic management of the patients but do not alter the biological processes underlying the cartilage degeneration. Vitamin E is a potential agent to prevent or treat osteoarthritis due to its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects. This review aims to summarize the current evidence on the relationship between vitamin E and osteoarthritis derived from preclinical and human studies. Cellular studies showed that vitamin E mitigated oxidative stress in cartilage explants or chondrocyte culture invoked by mechanical stress or free radicals. Animal studies suggested that vitamin E treatment prevented cartilage degeneration and improve oxidative status in animal models of osteoarthritis. Low circulating or synovial vitamin E was observed in human osteoarthritic patients compared to healthy controls. Observational studies also demonstrated that vitamin E was related to induction or progression of osteoarthritis in the general population. Vitamin E supplementation might improve the outcomes in patients with osteoarthritis, but negative results were also reported. Different isomers of vitamin E might possess distinct anti-osteoarthritic effects. As a conclusion, vitamin E may retard the progression of osteoarthritis by ameliorating oxidative stress and inflammation of the joint. Further studies are warranted to develop vitamin E as an anti-osteoarthritis agent to reduce the global burden of this disease.Entities:
Keywords: cartilage; chondrocytes; oxidative stress; tocopherol; tocotrienol
Year: 2018 PMID: 30186176 PMCID: PMC6113565 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2018.00946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Positive relationship between vitamin E and joint health.
| Study type | Researchers (years) | Study design and subject characteristics | Findings | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CC | African–American and White adults from the Johnston County Osteoarthritis Project. 200 radiographic knee OA patients (KL ≥ 2) and 200 matched control (KL = 0) aged 45–92 years (mean 62.4 years). | The OA patients had lower α:γTF ratio, higher γTF and higher δTF. Knee OA was negatively associated with serum αTF in men (OR: 0.1, CI: 0.01, 1.3), positively with serum γTF in men (OR: 21.8, CI: 1.8, 257), and not associated with serum δTF. Subjects at the highest tertile of α:γTF ratio had reduced risk for OA (adjusted odds ratio = 0.5, 95% CI: 0.2, 1.2), this association only persisted in African American (OR: 0.1 95% CI: 0.01, 0.6) and in men (OR: 0.02 CI: 0.001, 0.4). All the association not significant in women. | Temporal relationship could not be studied. Only vitamin E measured. | |
| CC | 20 Indian OA patients and 20 healthy control. Age of subjects between 35–60 years. | ↓ Erythrocytic glutathione and catalase, vitamin E, vitamin C and ↑ erythrocytic MDA, GST and GPX levels in OA patients. | The blood oxidative status might not reflect the synovial status. | |
| CC | 32 primary OA patients going for total knee replacement aged 55–88 years (mean age 69). | ↓ Synovial vitamin E level but not serum vitamin E in the OA patients. | Injured joint in control group might consume vitamin E as well. | |
| CC | 35 OA patients (24F: 11M), mean age 69.2 ± years. Diagnosed with clinical and radiographic knee OA (KL grades 3–4). | ↑ Plasma level of MDA and nitrite, ↓ vitamin E, TEAC and FRAP in OA patients. | Synovial fluid was not taken from healthy subjects, so comparison could not be made. The lack of associations between plasma and synovial markers showed that they were not reflective to each other. | |
| CC | 23 patients (mean age, 66.7 ± 7.6 years) with primary knee OA were divided into two groups: | ↓ vitamin E level in severe OA group compared to mild-moderate group. | Small sample size. No multivariate adjustment for confounding factors. | |
| CS | 562 Japanese subjects (224 male, 338 female) ≥ 40 years from Comprehensive Health. | ↑ β/γTF in non-OA subjects. | The association between αTF and OA might be U-shaped. | |
| CS | 827 Japanese rural participants (305 men and 522 women) aged > 40 years old (mean age: 69.2 ± 9.3 years). Self-administered brief diet history questionnaire. Minimum joint space width (mJSW) and osteophyte area (OPA) of the knee analysed using a computer-aided system. | Men: dietary nutrients were not associated with mJSW and OPA. | Subjects might suffer from recall bias. The study might not account for changes in dietary habit across time although 90.4% of the subjects indicated that they had not changed their diet. The computer-grading system transformed KL grade system to continuous variable, which could provide higher strength in analysis. | |
| CS | 56 subjects aged, 48 ± 1 years who were moderately active. Non-supplement users, non-NSAID users. They were classified based on vitamin D status: | ↑ γTF in vitamin D deficient subjects. | Cross-sectional design and small sample size. | |
| PS | 640 subjects from Framingham Osteoarthritis Cohort Study. | Incident OA was not associated with any nutrients. | Changes of dietary intake might occur with disease progression. | |
| PS | 214 participants aged 27–75 years (mean 67.4 years) from Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study without diagnosed hip osteoarthritis who underwent hip magnetic resonance imaging in 2009–2010. 55.6% were women. Dietary intake measured by food frequency questionnaire using Australian food composition data. MRI scan performed on their dominant hip. | Higher intake of vitamin E (OR 0.63, CI 0.41–0.96) was associated with a reduced prevalence of femoral head cartilage defects but not with femoral neck bone marrow lesion. | MRI showed early changes that might be associated with OA before the occurrence of symptoms. | |
| CT | Primary OA patients with KL grades 2–3, aged 58–59 years old, mix Malay and Chinese subjects. | Both treatment improved walking, standing VAS and WOMAC score, but not waiting VAS. | X sample size calculation. | |
| CT | Healthy Indian individuals (control group, | Compared to normal control, OA patients had lower VAS, SOD, GPX, catalase activity in the blood, but higher ceruloplasmin, MDA, CRP, and synovial IL-6. After treatment, SOD, GPX, catalase activity increased significantly, while ceruloplasmin, MDA, levels decreased significantly. All analytes measured in the blood. | X sample size calculation. | |
| CT | 46 patients diagnosed with osteoarthritis (OA) in one or both knees. | Vitamin C + E and meloxicam improved WOMAC and PVAS score but there is not significant difference between the groups. | X sample size calculation. | |
| CT | Patients scheduled for total knee arthroplasty, KL grades 3–4. Treatment: 69.2 ± 1.3 years. Placebo: 69.5 ± 1.3 years. | Vitamin E reduced MDA, increased αTF and Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity in synovial fluid and blood. | √ sample size calculation. | |
Negligible or negative relationship between vitamin E and joint health.
| Study type | Researchers (years) | Study design and subject characteristics | Findings | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CC | Advanced OA: pain > 2 on WOMAC, muscle weakness (measured by isokinetic knee-extension or flexion torque), KL grades 3–4. | ↑ TNFα, IL-5, IL-12, and IL-13 in the early OA group. Vitamin E level was similar between the two groups. | Small sample size. | |
| CS | 4685 Chinese participants > 40–85 years old undergoing regular health check-up. | Only vitamin C was associated with knee radiographic OA after multiple adjustments. Other antioxidants, such as carotenoids, vitamin E and selenium, were not significantly related with OA. | ||
| PS | 293 healthy adults (mean age = 58.0 ± 5.5 years) without knee pain or injury from Melbourne. | ↑ vitamin E intake, ↑ tibial plateau bone area (beta = 33.7, 95% CI = −3.1 to 70.4, | Diet intake might change over time. Intake of supplements not considered. | |
| PS CC | 145 cases aged 61.7 ± 7.7 years and 282 controls aged 61.5 ± 7.7 years. They were followed up for 30 months. Plasma vitamin C and serum vitamin E (αTF) were measured using HPLC. | Higher vitamin C levels [highest tertile vs. lowest tertile, adjusted OR: 2.20 (CI: 1.12–4.33) and vitamin E (highest tertile vs. lowest tertile, OR: 1.89 (1.02–3.50)] were associated with high incidence of whole knee OA. | Single measurement of vitamin C and vitamin E. Vitamin E level was not adjusted with cholesterol. | |
| CT | 72 Subjects from Australia with radiographic OA and pain. | The two groups were not significantly different between pain, stiffness, function, frequency of pain, categorical pain, and observer global assessment (between group and across time). | X sample size calculation. | |
| CT | Subjects from Australia with radiographic OA and pain. | Changes in knee cartilage volume was similar between the treatment and placebo groups before or after multiple adjustments. WOMAC and SF-36 were similar between two groups. Overall, intake of vitamin C, beta-carotene, and retinol equivalents were not associated with changes in knee cartilage volume. | X sample size calculation. | |
| CT | Age of the patients was 52.53 years (40–68 years) | Blood CAT, MDA, SOD, and GPX did not differ among the groups. | X sample size calculation. | |
| CT | Patients with primary OA. | Based on VAS, both group showed improvement and there was no significant difference between these two groups during 2nd (2 weeks) and 3rd visit (4 weeks). After 8th week (last visit), the antioxidant treated group performed better according to the authors. | X sample size calculation. | |
| CT | 120 Iranian patients aged 30–60 years diagnosed with osteoarthritis. | Across time, improvement in pain VAS, past 48 h function test, total pain severity was significantly higher in vitamin B compared to vitamin E and control group. | X sample size calculation. | |