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Fish oil is good medicine for heart failure

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Fish oil may decrease people's hospital visits.
Fish oil may decrease people's hospital visits.

Fish oil might help people with heart failure avoid repeat trips to the hospital, a new study suggests.

The findings come from an analysis of a clinical trial first published last year, where researchers tested the effects of fish oil and vitamin D on people's risk of heart disease and cancer.

Risk of first-time hospitalisation

That main trial – called the Vitamin D and Omega-3 Trial (VITAL) – had some encouraging results. Healthy older adults given a fish oil supplement were less likely to suffer a heart attack over the next several years, especially if they had never been big fish eaters.

The current analysis looked at whether supplements had any effect on participants' risk of being hospitalised for heart failure.

Heart failure is a chronic condition in which the heart gradually loses its ability to efficiently pump blood to the body. Often, it stems from heart-muscle damage caused by a heart attack – which raised the question of whether the benefits seen in the trial might extend to heart failure, explained Dr Luc Djousse.

Djousse, of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, led the current study.

Overall, his team found, neither vitamin D nor fish oil curbed the risk of first-time hospitalisation for heart failure over five years. But people using fish oil were somewhat less likely to need repeat hospital stays.

The finding offers a "signal" that the supplements might help prevent heart failure hospitalisations, Djousse said.

Fish twice a week

But, he stressed, that still needs to be backed up by further study.

Fish oil is rich in omega-3 fatty acids, which are known to help lower triglycerides, lessen inflammation and blood clotting, and help stabilise heart rhythm.

The American Heart Association (AHA) recommends that people eat fish twice a week – preferably fatty varieties higher in omega-3, such as salmon, mackerel, sardines and albacore tuna.

Djousse advised following that recommendation. "But don't fry your fish," he added. "Have it broiled or baked."

The findings, published in Circulation, come from a trial involving nearly 26 000 adults aged 50 and older who were initially free of heart problems. They were randomly assigned to take either 1g of prescription-grade fish oil (Omacor), 2 000 IU of vitamin D, or a placebo every day.

Over five years, the fish oil group was 28% less likely to suffer a heart attack compared to the placebo group. The effect was more pronounced among people whose diets had been low in fish: They were 40% less likely to have a heart attack than placebo users.

Numbers too small

When Djousse's team looked at heart failure hospitalisations, there was no clear effect of either fish oil or vitamin D on first-time admissions. But fish oil users were 14% less likely to have repeat hospitalizations: There were 326 recurrent hospital stays in that group and 379 in the placebo group.

Why wouldn't fish oil prevent a first hospitalisation? It's not clear. But Djousse said there were fewer first-time hospital stays, so the numbers might have been too small to detect an effect.

That is a possibility, agreed Dr David Siscovick, a senior research scientist with the New York Academy of Medicine who was not involved in the study.

More research is needed, Siscovick said. But, he added, at this point, there is no evidence that fish oil can prevent heart failure from developing.

There is, however, evidence that patients with existing heart failure may benefit.

A complex condition

Siscovick chaired an AHA committee that, in 2017, issued an advisory on omega-3 supplements and heart disease.

The advisory said it was "reasonable" for doctors to prescribe omega-3 to heart failure patients, based on an Italian clinical trial called GISSI. In that trial, researchers randomly assigned heart failure patients to either take an omega-3 supplement or a placebo (olive oil). Over four years, patients on omega-3 had a 9% lower risk of being hospitalised or dying.

The current study, Siscovick said, is "very consistent" with that evidence.

He also stressed, though, that heart failure is a complex condition, with different forms and different underlying causes. So if people with heart failure are curious about fish oil, he said, they should talk to their doctor about whether a prescription is right for them.

Image credit: iStock

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