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SAMe Is Worth Trying in Osteoarthritis, Fibromyalgia

ESTES PARK, COLO. – S-adenosyl-l-methionine doesn’t crack the annual top-10 lists of the most widely used nutritional supplements in complementary and alternative medicine surveys. But unlike other far more popular products, SAMe is supported by randomized trial evidence of efficacy for osteoarthritis, depression, and fibromyalgia.

Indeed, S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAMe) is "buzz-worthy," Dr. Lisa Corbin declared at a conference on internal medicine sponsored by the University of Colorado.

The Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, which she considers the best available source of physician information on supplements, rates SAMe as "likely effective" for depression and osteoarthritis and "possibly effective" for fibromyalgia, noted Dr. Corbin, medical director of the Center for Integrative Medicine and a general internist at the University of Colorado in Denver.

The Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database is subscription funded and eschews financial support from industry. The organization is famously tough in its efficacy ratings. "Likely effective" is about as good as it gets. Take, for example, hypertension. Nothing included in the natural medicines database has earned the coveted "effective" rating for treatment of hypertension, and only a single item is listed as "likely effective," namely the National Institutes of Health–backed DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet.

SAMe is a naturally occurring homocysteine derivative present in all living human cells. Its synthesis is related to vitamin B12/folate metabolism, and SAMe serves as an essential methyl donor in cellular metabolism.

Osteoarthritis

SAMe appears to increase proteoglycan synthesis and has analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects. Numerous small studies of varying quality have demonstrated a benefit similar to that of non-cyclooxygenase-2 (non-COX2) inhibitor selective nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), but with fewer side effects.

And in a University of California, Irvine, 16-week, double-blind, crossover trial of 61 patients with knee osteoarthritis, SAMe dosed at 400 mg t.i.d. and celecoxib at 200 mg/day demonstrated comparable pain reduction and improvement over time in functional health scores and isometric joint function tests.

SAMe was slower acting, taking almost a month to catch up to the COX-2 inhibitor in terms of analgesic effect. On the other hand, it appeared that the benefits of SAMe lasted after the medication was stopped.

Fibromyalgia

Danish rheumatologists randomized 43 patients with fibromyalgia to 800 mg/day of SAMe or placebo double-blind for 6 weeks. The SAMe group showed significant improvement compared with controls in fatigue, clinical disease activity, pain during the past week, mood, and morning stiffness, but not in tender point score or isokinetic muscle strength. Side effects in the SAMe group were no different from those with placebo (Scand. J. Rheumatol. 1991;20:294-302).

Another Danish double-blind randomized trial compared intravenous SAMe – a route of administration almost never used today – to placebo in 34 fibromyalgia patients. Ten days of IV SAMe at 600 mg/day showed nonsignificant trends toward better outcomes compared with placebo (Scand. J. Rheumatol. 1997; 26: 206-11).

Dr. Corbin said there have been no major safety issues with SAMe. At higher doses it has been associated with gastrointestinal side effects, headache, and loss of appetite.

"I think the financial toxicity is a potential issue," she quipped.

She urges her patients who are interested in trying dietary supplements to seek out those with "USP Verified" displayed prominently on the label. That designation signals that the product meets rigorous United States Pharmacopeia quality standards. However, SAMe is not a big seller, and no USP standards have been set for it. So she recommends that patients scan the shelves and select a SAMe product marketed by a company with USP labels on plenty of their other, more common supplements.

"That way you know that in general this manufacturer is making decent products, so that’s where I’d spend my money," Dr. Corbin said.

She reported having no financial interests relevant to her presentation.

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ESTES PARK, COLO. – S-adenosyl-l-methionine doesn’t crack the annual top-10 lists of the most widely used nutritional supplements in complementary and alternative medicine surveys. But unlike other far more popular products, SAMe is supported by randomized trial evidence of efficacy for osteoarthritis, depression, and fibromyalgia.

Indeed, S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAMe) is "buzz-worthy," Dr. Lisa Corbin declared at a conference on internal medicine sponsored by the University of Colorado.

The Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, which she considers the best available source of physician information on supplements, rates SAMe as "likely effective" for depression and osteoarthritis and "possibly effective" for fibromyalgia, noted Dr. Corbin, medical director of the Center for Integrative Medicine and a general internist at the University of Colorado in Denver.

The Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database is subscription funded and eschews financial support from industry. The organization is famously tough in its efficacy ratings. "Likely effective" is about as good as it gets. Take, for example, hypertension. Nothing included in the natural medicines database has earned the coveted "effective" rating for treatment of hypertension, and only a single item is listed as "likely effective," namely the National Institutes of Health–backed DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet.

SAMe is a naturally occurring homocysteine derivative present in all living human cells. Its synthesis is related to vitamin B12/folate metabolism, and SAMe serves as an essential methyl donor in cellular metabolism.

Osteoarthritis

SAMe appears to increase proteoglycan synthesis and has analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects. Numerous small studies of varying quality have demonstrated a benefit similar to that of non-cyclooxygenase-2 (non-COX2) inhibitor selective nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), but with fewer side effects.

And in a University of California, Irvine, 16-week, double-blind, crossover trial of 61 patients with knee osteoarthritis, SAMe dosed at 400 mg t.i.d. and celecoxib at 200 mg/day demonstrated comparable pain reduction and improvement over time in functional health scores and isometric joint function tests.

SAMe was slower acting, taking almost a month to catch up to the COX-2 inhibitor in terms of analgesic effect. On the other hand, it appeared that the benefits of SAMe lasted after the medication was stopped.

Fibromyalgia

Danish rheumatologists randomized 43 patients with fibromyalgia to 800 mg/day of SAMe or placebo double-blind for 6 weeks. The SAMe group showed significant improvement compared with controls in fatigue, clinical disease activity, pain during the past week, mood, and morning stiffness, but not in tender point score or isokinetic muscle strength. Side effects in the SAMe group were no different from those with placebo (Scand. J. Rheumatol. 1991;20:294-302).

Another Danish double-blind randomized trial compared intravenous SAMe – a route of administration almost never used today – to placebo in 34 fibromyalgia patients. Ten days of IV SAMe at 600 mg/day showed nonsignificant trends toward better outcomes compared with placebo (Scand. J. Rheumatol. 1997; 26: 206-11).

Dr. Corbin said there have been no major safety issues with SAMe. At higher doses it has been associated with gastrointestinal side effects, headache, and loss of appetite.

"I think the financial toxicity is a potential issue," she quipped.

She urges her patients who are interested in trying dietary supplements to seek out those with "USP Verified" displayed prominently on the label. That designation signals that the product meets rigorous United States Pharmacopeia quality standards. However, SAMe is not a big seller, and no USP standards have been set for it. So she recommends that patients scan the shelves and select a SAMe product marketed by a company with USP labels on plenty of their other, more common supplements.

"That way you know that in general this manufacturer is making decent products, so that’s where I’d spend my money," Dr. Corbin said.

She reported having no financial interests relevant to her presentation.

ESTES PARK, COLO. – S-adenosyl-l-methionine doesn’t crack the annual top-10 lists of the most widely used nutritional supplements in complementary and alternative medicine surveys. But unlike other far more popular products, SAMe is supported by randomized trial evidence of efficacy for osteoarthritis, depression, and fibromyalgia.

Indeed, S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAMe) is "buzz-worthy," Dr. Lisa Corbin declared at a conference on internal medicine sponsored by the University of Colorado.

The Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, which she considers the best available source of physician information on supplements, rates SAMe as "likely effective" for depression and osteoarthritis and "possibly effective" for fibromyalgia, noted Dr. Corbin, medical director of the Center for Integrative Medicine and a general internist at the University of Colorado in Denver.

The Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database is subscription funded and eschews financial support from industry. The organization is famously tough in its efficacy ratings. "Likely effective" is about as good as it gets. Take, for example, hypertension. Nothing included in the natural medicines database has earned the coveted "effective" rating for treatment of hypertension, and only a single item is listed as "likely effective," namely the National Institutes of Health–backed DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet.

SAMe is a naturally occurring homocysteine derivative present in all living human cells. Its synthesis is related to vitamin B12/folate metabolism, and SAMe serves as an essential methyl donor in cellular metabolism.

Osteoarthritis

SAMe appears to increase proteoglycan synthesis and has analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects. Numerous small studies of varying quality have demonstrated a benefit similar to that of non-cyclooxygenase-2 (non-COX2) inhibitor selective nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), but with fewer side effects.

And in a University of California, Irvine, 16-week, double-blind, crossover trial of 61 patients with knee osteoarthritis, SAMe dosed at 400 mg t.i.d. and celecoxib at 200 mg/day demonstrated comparable pain reduction and improvement over time in functional health scores and isometric joint function tests.

SAMe was slower acting, taking almost a month to catch up to the COX-2 inhibitor in terms of analgesic effect. On the other hand, it appeared that the benefits of SAMe lasted after the medication was stopped.

Fibromyalgia

Danish rheumatologists randomized 43 patients with fibromyalgia to 800 mg/day of SAMe or placebo double-blind for 6 weeks. The SAMe group showed significant improvement compared with controls in fatigue, clinical disease activity, pain during the past week, mood, and morning stiffness, but not in tender point score or isokinetic muscle strength. Side effects in the SAMe group were no different from those with placebo (Scand. J. Rheumatol. 1991;20:294-302).

Another Danish double-blind randomized trial compared intravenous SAMe – a route of administration almost never used today – to placebo in 34 fibromyalgia patients. Ten days of IV SAMe at 600 mg/day showed nonsignificant trends toward better outcomes compared with placebo (Scand. J. Rheumatol. 1997; 26: 206-11).

Dr. Corbin said there have been no major safety issues with SAMe. At higher doses it has been associated with gastrointestinal side effects, headache, and loss of appetite.

"I think the financial toxicity is a potential issue," she quipped.

She urges her patients who are interested in trying dietary supplements to seek out those with "USP Verified" displayed prominently on the label. That designation signals that the product meets rigorous United States Pharmacopeia quality standards. However, SAMe is not a big seller, and no USP standards have been set for it. So she recommends that patients scan the shelves and select a SAMe product marketed by a company with USP labels on plenty of their other, more common supplements.

"That way you know that in general this manufacturer is making decent products, so that’s where I’d spend my money," Dr. Corbin said.

She reported having no financial interests relevant to her presentation.

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SAMe Is Worth Trying in Osteoarthritis, Fibromyalgia
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EXPERT OPINION FROM A CONFERENCE ON INTERNAL MEDICINE SPONSORED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO

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