With Supplements, ADT in Prostate Cancer of Little Threat to Bone Density
— Study suggests calcium/vitamin D alone sufficient for long-duration therapy - by Mike Bassett, Staff Writer, MedPage Today June 3, 2021
I'm not at all sure the ADT patient community here at HU would agree with the results of this study. What continues to astonish me is the complete lack of knowledge by the SOC medical community of the importance of magnesium, boron, and Vitamin K2 to bone health. Equally important, there is never any mention in such studies of the possible detrimental effect of calcium supplementation (without the metabolic support of these vitamins and minerals) since the Ca may well end up deposited in the arteries, joints, and kidneys (as stones) - and not in the bones, as intended!
The research is clear and ubiquitous, so why the heck are docs still hawking the benefits of Ca + D3 alone, esp. since there have been numerous studies indicating none-to-minimal benefits for bone health from those supplements by themselves. Well, take a look at the source of the funding for this study and you might get a clue:
Financial Support/Funding Statement: PCS V trial was funded by an operating grant from Sanofi-Canada. The current study did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
Think: Eligard, Jevtana, & Taxotere. Sort of the research result you (Sanofi-Canada) would hope for, if you sell multiple ADT drugs, but none for osteoporosis; i.e., keep taking those ADT drugs and a small dose of Ca + D3 will be all you need for your bone health. The American Urology Association should be embarrassed to have printed this privately-funded research in their Journal.
The MedPage Today article is here:
With Supplements, ADT in Prostate Cancer of Little Threat to Bone Density
— Study suggests calcium/vitamin D alone sufficient for long-duration therapy - by Mike Bassett, Staff Writer, MedPage Today June 3, 2021
medpagetoday.com/hematology...
And the study abstract can be found here:
The Clinical Significance of Bone Mineral Density Changes Following Long-Term Androgen Deprivation Therapy in Localized Prostate Cancer Patients - Journal of UrologyAdult Urology - Jun 2021
auajournals.org/doi/abs/10....
Always look first at the funding source when you review research for any topic. It just might give you a clue as to what the results are likely to be.
Be Safe & Stay Well - Captain K9