Can folic acid cause cancer?

Supplements of vitamin B are thought to increase the risk of bowel cancer, warns Jennifer Swift

Shirley Sepstrup’s busy job in a hospital lab in East Sussex left her with little time to cook, so she often relied on convenience foods, hoping that her daily multivitamin pill would make up for any dietary deficiencies. But when a colonoscopy showed that, at 52, she had developed bowel cancer - like her father, uncle and grandfather - she had to radically change her eating habits.
Out went the ready meals, and Shirley began to eat wholefoods, drink 1.5 litres of water a day, and avoid known risks for bowel cancer - red meat, preserved meats such as ham and bacon, sugar and processed foods. But recently she learnt of an unexpected risk: a vitamin.

Folic acid is the synthetic form of a naturally occurring B vitamin, folate. Women who have good levels of folate in their diet, or take folic acid supplements, are far less likely to have babies affected by the birth defect spina bifida. America and Canada started adding folic acid to flour in 1998 and the Food Standards Agency (FSA) in the UK has called for a similar fortification here. But recent research has linked high folic acid consumption with an increased risk of bowel cancer; the modest-sounding annual increase of one per cent could, in fact, amount to an extra 3,000 cases per year in the UK. Other evidence points to an increased risk of breast or prostate cancers.

Natural folate protects against cancer because it allows the body to copy DNA accurately.

“But many middle-aged and elderly people have tiny pre?malignant lesions,” says Prof Young-Im Kim of the University of Toronto. “Excess folate, especially in the form of folic acid, can fuel lesion growth, accelerating progression into life-threatening cancers, because high levels of the vitamin make it easier for tumour cells to copy themselves.”

He says that soon after fortification of flour began in North America, the rate of bowel cancer - then in decline - abruptly increased. The FSA’s advisers were sufficiently concerned to recommend holding off a similar initiative until the results of two further studies emerge later this year.

Overdosing on B vitamins was thought to be impossible because they are water-soluble and any excess is excreted in the urine. But evidence is mounting that folic acid circumvents the body’s natural mechanisms for limiting folate absorption in the gut. Folic acid goes directly to the liver, which is easily saturated, and the excess spills out into the body.

“People with a high intake end up with unmetabolised folic acid floating in their bloodstream,” says Dr Siân Astley of the Institute for Food Research in Norwich. “We don’t really know what its consequences might be.”

The recommended daily intake for folate is 200 micrograms (mcg), and most multivitamins contain this amount of folic acid. But it is also added to breakfast cereals, snack bars and some margarines. Official government advice puts the safe upper limit for folic acid at 1,000mcg per day, but the leading vitamin B expert, Prof David Smith of Oxford University, thinks there is now sufficient evidence to cut that down to 500mcg in general and 400mcg for cancer survivors.

“If you eat a lot of fortified cereals, you may want to rethink your daily multivitamin. Or you could stick with the vitamin pill and switch to wholegrains without added synthetic vitamins, such as porridge or muesli,” says Dr Astley. “Fortification is an overly broad approach that increases everyone’s folic acid intake, instead of targeting those who need it.”

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Review places vitamin benefits in doubt

People who take vitamin supplements may not benefit their health and could increase the risk of premature death, according to a new report.

Danish researchers found that antioxidants do not prolong life expectancy as some may hope and that beta-carotene, vitamin A and vitamin E may actually increase the risk of death.

They did not uncover evidence that vitamin C and selenium have either positive or negative effects.

Their findings are based on a review of data from 67 randomised trials that involved just under a quarter of a million people and were released today by the Cochrane Library.

“We could find no evidence to support taking antioxidant supplements to reduce the risk of dying earlier in healthy people or patients with various diseases,” said Goran Bjelakovic, who performed the systematic review at the Copenhagen Trial Unit at the Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark.

“Regarding these antioxidants we need more data from randomised trials. The bottom line is that current evidence does not support the use of antioxidant supplements in the general healthy population or in patients with certain diseases.”

Commenting on the review, the UK’s Food Standards Agency said: “Most people should be able to get all the nutrients they need by eating a varied and balanced diet.

“If consumers do choose to take supplements, it is important they are informed and they may also wish to also consult with their GP. For some vitamins and minerals, taking too much or taking them for too long can cause harmful effects.

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Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes

an independent body that advises the Food Standards Agency on matters relating to new foodstuffs and processes.
Abbreviation ACNFP

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