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Reply to Hemilä by Lykkesfeldt and Poulsen

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2010

Jens Lykkesfeldt
Affiliation:
Department of Veterinary Disease Biology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark, email [email protected]
Henrik E. Poulsen
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark
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Abstract

Type
Letter to the editor
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2010

In our paper(Reference Lykkesfeldt and Poulsen1), it is clearly stated that we focus on the supplementation of vitamin C and the effect on health in the population at large. Hemilä argues that we have not included vitamin C therapy, i.e. the use of vitamin C as a drug for specific conditions. This is absolutely correct, as this has not been the focus of our paper. We believe that inclusion of the problematic therapeutic area would confuse the issue that our paper focuses on, namely the use of vitamin C supplementation to improve the health of the population. Although the intention of the paper has not been to do a formal ‘systematic review’, our selection criteria are clearly explained and referenced and are in accordance with those used in a systematic review and meta-analysis of the effect of antioxidants on mortality(Reference Bjelakovic, Nikolova and Gluud2, Reference Kjaergard, Villumsen and Gluud3). We therefore do not agree with the criticism regarding the rationale for the selection of the literature.

Hemilä further questions the importance of using hypovitaminosis C as an inclusion criterion in future clinical trials as suggested by us and believes that the statement ‘Reviewing the extracted literature, it is striking that no study has used vitamin C deficiency as an inclusion criterion’ is misleading. However, although Hemilä left out the first part of the sentence, thereby extending the statement to the entire literature, it remains a fact that none of our cited studies did use this inclusion criterion. Moreover, Hemilä suggests that using only UK trials in a systematic review since ‘several surveys in the 1970s and earlier had found a particularly low dietary vitamin C intake in the UK’ would serve as a surrogate for the low intake criterion. However, we find this a poor surrogate for hypovitaminosis C as an inclusion criterion. As outlined in the review, the well-established non-linear absorption kinetics of vitamin C clearly renders baseline vitamin C status a major confounder for the effect of its supplementation.

In conclusion, we maintain the view that lack of proper selection criteria dominates the literature on vitamin C and has hampered the ability to judge the possible effect of vitamin C supplementation whether this is harmful or beneficial.

Acknowledgements

J. L. has no conflicts of interest. H. E. P. is a consultant for the Danish company Ferrosan A/S that produces supplements.

References

1 Lykkesfeldt, J & Poulsen, HE (2010) Is vitamin C supplementation beneficial? Lessons learned from randomised controlled trials. Br J Nutr 103, 12511259.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2 Bjelakovic, G, Nikolova, D, Gluud, LL, et al. (2007) Mortality in randomized trials of antioxidant supplements for primary and secondary prevention: systematic review and meta-analysis. JAMA 297, 842857.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
3 Kjaergard, LL, Villumsen, J & Gluud, C (2001) Reported methodologic quality and discrepancies between large and small randomized trials in meta-analyses. Ann Intern Med 135, 982989.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed