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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2008 Feb 2;336(7638):262-6.
doi: 10.1136/bmj.39440.525752.BE. Epub 2008 Jan 15.

Vascular events in healthy older women receiving calcium supplementation: randomised controlled trial

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Vascular events in healthy older women receiving calcium supplementation: randomised controlled trial

Mark J Bolland et al. BMJ. .

Abstract

Objective: To determine the effect of calcium supplementation on myocardial infarction, stroke, and sudden death in healthy postmenopausal women.

Design: Randomised, placebo controlled trial.

Setting: Academic medical centre in an urban setting in New Zealand.

Participants: 1471 postmenopausal women (mean age 74): 732 were randomised to calcium supplementation and 739 to placebo.

Main outcome measures: Adverse cardiovascular events over five years: death, sudden death, myocardial infarction, angina, other chest pain, stroke, transient ischaemic attack, and a composite end point of myocardial infarction, stroke, or sudden death.

Results: Myocardial infarction was more commonly reported in the calcium group than in the placebo group (45 events in 31 women v 19 events in 14 women, P=0.01). The composite end point of myocardial infarction, stroke, or sudden death was also more common in the calcium group (101 events in 69 women v 54 events in 42 women, P=0.008). After adjudication myocardial infarction remained more common in the calcium group (24 events in 21 women v 10 events in 10 women, relative risk 2.12, 95% confidence interval 1.01 to 4.47). For the composite end point 61 events were verified in 51 women in the calcium group and 36 events in 35 women in the placebo group (relative risk 1.47, 0.97 to 2.23). When unreported events were added from the national database of hospital admissions in New Zealand the relative risk of myocardial infarction was 1.49 (0.86 to 2.57) and that of the composite end point was 1.21 (0.84 to 1.74). The respective rate ratios were 1.67 (95% confidence intervals 0.98 to 2.87) and 1.43 (1.01 to 2.04); event rates: placebo 16.3/1000 person years, calcium 23.3/1000 person years. For stroke (including unreported events) the relative risk was 1.37 (0.83 to 2.28) and the rate ratio was 1.45 (0.88 to 2.49).

Conclusion: Calcium supplementation in healthy postmenopausal women is associated with upward trends in cardiovascular event rates. This potentially detrimental effect should be balanced against the likely benefits of calcium on bone.

Trial registration: Australian Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN 012605000242628.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: IRR has received research support from and acted as a consultant for Fonterra and Mission Pharmacal.

Figures

None
Kaplan-Meier survival plot showing proportion of healthy postmenopausal women assigned to calcium supplementation or to placebo that had a verified myocardial infarction during the study. Included are events self reported by participants and those from the national database of hospital admissions and review of death certificates (P=0.14 when compared by log rank test)

Comment in

References

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