Updated
Updated · Medical News Today · Jun 23
High-Dose DHA Fails to Improve Cognition in 225 At-Risk Adults Over 2 Years
Updated
Updated · Medical News Today · Jun 23

High-Dose DHA Fails to Improve Cognition in 225 At-Risk Adults Over 2 Years

3 articles · Updated · Medical News Today · Jun 23

Summary

  • A 2-year randomized placebo-controlled trial found high-dose DHA supplements did not improve cognition or brain changes in 225 older adults at risk for dementia who completed the study.
  • 365 participants were originally randomized, and DHA raised cerebrospinal fluid and blood DHA levels by 6 months, showing the supplement reached the brain without translating into measurable cognitive benefit.
  • Nearly half the participants carried the APOE ε4 Alzheimer’s risk allele, but researchers still found no meaningful cognitive advantage for carriers or non-carriers; safety outcomes were similar to placebo.
  • A 38% dropout rate—largely tied to COVID-19—plus missing data and a relatively young, atypical prevention population limited the study’s power and generalizability.
  • The findings argue against using high-dose DHA alone to prevent dementia and instead support broader brain-health measures such as diet, exercise, sleep, and vascular risk control.

Insights

Could an oxidation-resistant fish oil be the key to preventing dementia where standard supplements have failed?
If expensive brain supplements fail to prevent dementia, what proven lifestyle changes actually work?