Age-Related Eye Disease Study
The Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS) was a clinical trial sponsored by the National Eye Institute that ran from 1992 to 2001.[1] The study was designed to:
- investigate the natural history and age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and cataracts, and
- evaluate the effects of high doses of antioxidants and zinc on the progression of the two conditions in those with AMD.
The results were reported in the October 2001 issue of Advanced AMD is defined as either choroidal neovascularization (wet macular degeneration) or atrophic age-related macular degeneration (geographic atrophy). The anti-oxidants and zinc supplements only reduced the risk of progression to wet macular degeneration. Those that benefited from the dietary supplements included those with intermediate-stage AMD and those with advanced AMD in one eye only. The supplements had no significant effect on the development or progression of cataracts. "High levels" in this case were defined to be:
- 500 milligrams of vitamin C;
- 400 international units of vitamin E;
- 15 milligrams of beta-carotene (or 25,000 international units of vitamin A);
- 80 milligrams of the dietary mineral zinc, in the form of zinc oxide; and
- two milligrams of copper as cupric oxide, added to prevent copper deficiency anemia, a condition associated with high levels of zinc intake.
Bausch & Lomb was a collaborator in the study.[2] They and other suppliers provide supplements pre-packaged with formulations based on this study.
Studies in 2016[3] and 2018[4] later showed that this average 25 percent reduction in risk from the combination of anti-oxidants and zinc varies by genotype.
AREDS2
The original AREDS study was followed by AREDS2, a five-year study that started in 2006 to test whether the original AREDS formulation would be improved by adding
The study reported that there was no overall additional benefit from adding omega-3 fatty acids or lutein and zeaxanthin to the formulation. However, the study did find benefits in two subgroups of participants: those not given beta-carotene, and those who had very little lutein and zeaxanthin in their diets. Removing beta-carotene did not curb the formulation's protective effect against developing advanced AMD,[5] which is important given that high doses of beta-carotene have been linked to higher risk of lung cancers in smokers.[8] According to Dr. Emily Chew, "Because carotenoids can compete with each other for absorption in the body, beta-carotene may have masked the effect of the lutein and zeaxanthin in the overall analysis."[5]
References
- ^ PMID 11594942.
- PMID 10588299.
- PMID 27471039.
- PMID 29311295.
- ^ a b c d "NIH study provides clarity on supplements for protection against blinding eye disease". May 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-06-07. Retrieved 2024-02-21.
- PMID 23644932.
- ^ a b "Age-Related Eye Disease Study 2 (AREDS2) - Full Text View". clinicaltrials.gov.
- PMID 8602180.
External links
- NEI's website about the AREDS study
- NEI's website about the AREDS2 study