What Is SAMe
Newsweek
July 5, 1999
By Geoffrey Cowley and Anne Underwood
She was making lunch for herself and a friend one Saturday this spring
when an unfamiliar feeling swept over her. The 50-year-old social worker
had fallen deep into depression two years earlier, and had given up on
prescription antidepressants when the first one she tried left her sluggish,
sexually dormant and numb to her own emotions. Then, in mid-March, she
heard about a naturally occurring substance called SAMe (pronounced "Sammy").
She had been taking it for just a few days when she began setting the table
that Saturday morning. A ginger-miso sauce was chilling in the fridge,
and she was garnishing her finest plates with fresh anemones. Suddenly,
there it was: a sense of undiluted pleasure.
This woman (who asked not to be named) has taken SAMe ever since, and her
mood isn't the only thing that has changed. Until this spring she took
prescription-strength anti-inflammatories for her arthritis, and still
had trouble bending her knees. She's now off those drugsãand feeling more
nimble than she has in 20 years.
Could an over-the-counter tonic really do all this? Pills purporting to
cure everything from hemorrhoids to hangnails are usually worthless and
sometimes dangerous. And because SAMe has not been studied extensively
in the United States, many doctors are leery. Beware, says Dr. Gilbert
Ross of the American Council on Science and Health, a conservative watchdog
group. Supplement dealers are once again trying to "flimflam the public
into using untested remedies instead of FDA-approved pharmaceuticals."
The Food and Drug Administration has not rigorously evaluated SAMe, let
alone approved it. (Federal law permits the unregulated sale of naturally
occurring substances as long as marketers avoid therapeutic claims.) And
the studies that researchers have conducted are not of the magnitude the
FDA would require for a drug approval. But that doesn't mean SAMe is "untested."
In dozens of European trials involving thousands of patients, it has performed
as well as traditional treatments for arthritis and major depression. Research
suggests it can also ease normally intractable liver conditions. SAMe doesn't
seem to cause adverse effects, even at high doses. And doctors have prescribed
it successfully for two decades in the 14 countries where it has been approved
as a drug.
Until recently, few Americans had heard of the stuff. An Italian firm developed
it as a pharmaceutical in the early 1970s but lacked the will or the resources
to make a run at a drug approval in the United States. Then, this spring,
two U.S. vitamin companies, GNC and Pharmavite, started importing large
quantities of SAMe to sell as a supplement. The product took off quicklyPharmavite's
Nature Made brand now ranks 25th among the 13,000 supplements sold in grocery
and drugstoresand the impact is still growing. When you consider
that some 50 million Americans suffer from arthritis or depression, the
implications are staggering.
SAMe (known formally as S-adenosylmethionine) is not an herb or a hormone.
It's a molecule that all living cells, including our own, produce constantly.
To appreciate its importance, you need to understand a process called methylation
(chart). It's a simple transaction in which one molecule donates a four-atom
appendagea so-called methyl groupto a neighboring molecule.
Both the donor and the recipient change shape in the process, and the transformations
can have far-reaching effects. Methylation occurs a billion times a second
throughout the body, affecting everything from fetal development to brain
function. It regulates the expression of genes. It preserves the fatty
membranes that insulate our cells. And it helps regulate the action of
various hormones and neurotransmitters, including serotonin, melatonin,
dopamine and adrenaline. As biochemist Craig Cooney observes in his new
book, "Methyl Magic," "Without methylation there could be no life as we
know it."
And without SAMe, there could be no methylation as we know it. Though
various molecules can pass methyl groups to their neighbors, SAMe is the
most active of all methyl donors. Our bodies make SAMe from methionine,
an amino acid found in protein-rich foods, then continually recycle it.
Once a SAMe molecule loses its methyl group, it breaks down to form homocysteine.
Homocysteine is extremely toxic if it builds up within cells. But with
the help of several B vitamins (B6, B12 and folic acid), our bodies convert
homocysteine into glutathione, a valuable antioxidant, or "remethylate"
it back into methionine.
SAMe and homocysteine are essentially two versions of the same moleculeone
benign and one dangerous. When our cells are well stocked with B vitamins,
the brisk pace of methylation keeps homocysteine levels low. But when we're
low on those vitamins, homocysteine can build up quickly, stalling the
production of SAMe and causing countless health problems. High homocysteine
is a major risk factor for heart attack and stroke. During pregnancy, it
raises the risk of spina bifida and other birth defects. And many studies
have implicated it in depression.
How, exactly, might taking extra SAMe improve a person's mood? Researchers
have identified several possibilities. Normal brain function involves the
passage of chemical messengers between cells. SAMe may enhance the impact
of mood-boosting messengers such as serotonin and dopamineeither
by regulating their breakdown or by speeding production of the receptor
molecules they latch on to. SAMe may also make existing receptors more
responsive. These molecules float in the outer membranes of brain cells
like swimmers treading water in a pool. If the membranes get thick and
glutinous, due to age or other assaults, the receptors lose their ability
to move and change in response to chemical signals. By methylating fats
called phospholipids, SAMe keeps the membranes fluid and the receptors
mobile.
Whatever the mechanism, there is little question that SAMe can help
fight depression. Since the 1970s, researchers have published 40 clinical
studies involving roughly 1,400 patients. And though the studies are small
by FDA standards, the findings are remarkably consistent. In 1994 Dr. Giorgio
Bressa, a psychiatrist at the University Cattolica Sacro Cuore in Rome,
pooled results from a dozen controlled trials and found that "the efficacy
of SAMe in treating depressive syndromes... is superior [to] that of placebo
and comparable to that of standard... antidepressants."
This isn't the first natural substance to show promise as a mood booster.
Small studies suggest that St. John's wort can ease low-grade melancholy,
but SAMe has been tested against far more serious disorders. In one of
several small U.S. studies, researchers at the University of California,
Irvine, gave 17 severely depressed patients a four-week course of SAMe
(1,600 mg daily) or desipramine, a well-established antidepressant. The
SAMe recipients enjoyed a slightly higher response rate (62 percent) than
the folks on desipramine (50 percent).
No one has found SAMe significantly more effective than a prescription
antidepressant, but it's clearly less toxic. The drugs that predate Prozac
(tricyclics and MAO inhibitors) can be deadly in overdose, or in combination
with other medications. Newer antidepressants, such as Prozac, Zoloft and
Paxil, are less dangerous, but their known side effects range from headaches
and diarrhea to agitation, sleeplessness and sexual dysfunction. And SAMe?
Studies suggest that like other antidepressants, it may trigger manic episodes
in people with bipolar disorder. Aside from that, the most serious side
effect is a mild stomach upset.
Until large U.S. studies confirm these findings, few American doctors
will recommend SAMe to severely depressed people. "The evidence looks promising,"
says Harvard psychiatrist Maurizio Fava, "but it's not definitive. In some
European countries they have different marketing standards than we do."
UCLA biochemist Steven Clarke echoes that concern, saying the nation is
embarking on a large, uncontrolled experiment in which consumers are the
guinea pigs. A key concern is that depressed patients will drop other treatments
to try SAMe, and end up suicidal. Columbia University psychiatrist Richard
Brown warns of that hazard in "Stop Depression Now," a new book coauthored
with Baylor University neuropharmacologist Teodoro Bottiglieri. Yet Brown
himself has treated several hundred patients with SAMe in recent years,
sometimes combining it with other drugs, and he has never had a bad experience.
"It's the best antidepressant I've ever prescribed," he says flatly. "I've
seen only benefits."
If the world needs a better antidepressant, it could also use a better
arthritis remedy. Nearly a third of the 40 million Americans with chronic
joint pain use drugs like aspirin and ibuprofen. In arthritis-strength
doses, these so-called NSAIDs, or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs,
can have devastating gastric side effects. Some 103,000 Americans are hospitalized
annually for NSAID- induced ulcers, and 16,500 die. Even when NSAIDs don't
destroy the digestive tract, they may ultimately worsen people's joint
problems, for they slow the production of collagen and proteoglycans, the
tissues that make cartilage an effective shock absorber.
Could SAMe provide an alternative? In a dozen clinical trials involving
more than 22,000 patients, researchers have found SAMe as effective as
pharmaceutical treatments for pain and inflammation. But unlike the NSAIDs,
SAMe shows no sign of damaging the digestive tract. And instead of speeding
the breakdown of cartilage, SAMe may help restore it. You'll recall that
after giving up its methyl group, SAMe becomes homocysteine, which can
be broken down to form glutathione (the antioxidant) or remethylated to
form methionine (the precursor to SAMe). As luck would have it, the reactions
that produce glutathione also yield molecules called sulfate groups, which
help generate those joint-sparing proteoglycans.
What does this mean for patients? The Arthritis Foundation, a mainstream
advocacy group, recently said its medical experts were satisfied that SAMe
"provides pain relief" but not that it "contributes to joint health." The
evidence that SAMe can repair cartilage is admittedly preliminary, but
it's intriguing. When German researchers gave 21 patients either SAMe or
a placebo for three months, using MRI scans to monitor the cartilage in
their hands, the SAMe recipients showed measurable improvements. That wouldn't
surprise Inge Kracke of Cologne. She was an active 48-year-old when a 1996
auto accident mangled her left knee and left her hobbling on a cane. Dr.
Peter Billigmann of the University of Landau prescribed a regimen that
combined SAMe (1,200 mg a day for three months) with injections of hyaluronic
acid, a cartilage component. Cartilage injuries don't normally heal, but
a year later Kracke's knee looked better on X-rays. She now plays golf
three times a week.
SAMe may have other benefits as well. Studies suggest it can help normalize
liver function in patients with cirrhosis, hepatitis and cholestasis (blockage
of the bile ducts). SAMe has also been found to prevent or reverse liver
damage caused by certain drugs. As patients hear more about this supplement,
they may try treating themselves for all these conditions and others. But
many of them will be disappointedeither because they expect miracles
that SAMe can't deliver, or because they take the wrong dose or form.
The first challenge is to buy full-strength SAMe. "Some companies are
very reliable manufacturers," says Dr. Paul Packman of Washington University
in St. Louis. "But some aren't. You can't always tell from the label on
the bottle how much active ingredient is actually in it." Pharmaceutical-grade
SAMe comes in two forms, one called tosylate and a newer, more stable form
called butanedisulfonate. Only Nature Made and GNC sell the new butanedisulfonate
version, but several U.S. retailers import reliable tosylate products.
And because SAMe is absorbed mainly through the intestine, it's best taken
in "enteric coated" tablets that pass through the stomach intact. None
of the products comes cheap. The price of a 400-mg dose ranges from $2.50
(Nature Made) up to $18.56 for an uncoated Natrol product called SAM sulfate.
Assuming you buy full-strength SAMe, the second challenge is to use
it effectively. Experts advise taking it twice a day on an empty stomach,
but different people may require different amounts. Though studies suggest
that 400 mg a day is an effective dose for arthritis, the daily doses used
in depression trials have ranged as high as 1,600 mg. Clinicians generally
start people with mood problems at 400 and ratchet up as necessary.
Unfortunately, there is no convincing evidence that SAMe can make healthy
people happier or more mobile than they already are. But there are lessons
here for everyone. We now know that methylation is vital to our well-being.
It's equally clear that the modern Western dietrich in protein, light
on the plant foods that supply folateis a prescription for stalling
that vital process. "SAMe works as a medication to treat certain diseases,"
says Paul Frankel, a biostatistician at the City of Hope National Medical
Center in Duarte, Calif. "But for most people the problem is undermethylation
of homocysteine." In other words, many of us could arm ourselves against
low moods, bad joints and weak hearts simply by upping our intake of B
vitamins. That may sound less exciting than taking a miracle supplement.
But with luck, it could keep you from ever needing one.
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