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A study that
was published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association
revealed that vitamin B supplements did not protect people taking them from
developing cancer, although past research has suggested it did have the
aforementioned effect.
Lead author of the study Dr. Shumin Zhang of Brigham and
Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, along with his team, looked
at 5,442 female health-care professionals throughout the United States, all of whom had
been taking a supplement including vitamins B6, B12 and B9 (also known as folic
acid) daily over a period of about seven and a half years.
Research concluded that the group of women who had been
given vitamin B presented neither lower nor higher risk of developing cancer
than those who had taken a placebo instead. In the former group, scientists
reported 187 cancer cases, while in the latter, a number of 192 women developed
the condition.
All the persons involved in the study suffered from cardiovascular
disease, high blood pressure or high cholesterol levels, which rendered them
more prone to being affected by cancer, while their average age was 63.
Nevertheless, the team of researchers informed that where
women aged 65 or older from the vitamin supplement group were concerned, the
risk of developing breast cancer had been registered to have decreased by 38
percent. Moreover, the chances of them developing any type of cancer were 25
percent lower. Still, the study read that there was no cogent proof that these
results had not been a mere non-related to the supplement coincidence.
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