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Jellyfish Memory Supplement Prevagen Called 'Clear-Cut Fraud'

<ѻýҕl class="mpt-content-deck">— Stop buying useless brain supplements, the Skeptical Cardiologist says
Last Updated June 7, 2019
MedpageToday

A JAMA viewpoint article entitled "" caught my eye recently, and I immediately thought of the widely-advertised, jellyfish-derived and totally useless supplement Prevagen.

The article, written by three prominent neurologists and dementia researchers at the University of California San Francisco, discusses the lack of science behind the $3.2 billion industry promoting unproven supplements for improved cognition and brain health.

Unproven supplements like Prevagen (Made from jellyfish! With a hard to pronounce crucial ingredient!) utilize a facade of "proven benefits" and succeed by promoting themselves as science-backed on radio, television, and the internet.

The JAMA article notes that this industry thrives due to the increasing prevalence of Alzheimer's disease, and its lack of effective treatments.

Consumers, it goes on to say, who are intent on finding methods to prevent dementia need to know three things:

  • There is no known dietary supplement that prevents cognitive decline for dementia.
  • Supplements do not undergo FDA testing for safety or review for efficacy.
  • Some supplements may cause harm. For example, vitamin E increases risk of hemorrhagic stroke and, in high doses, increases risk of death.

The Facade of Science-Backed Research

Companies like Quincy Bioscience, the maker of Prevagen, utilize sophisticated techniques that supply false scientific backing for brain health interventions.

The states "Prevagen improves memory" and "has been clinically shown to help with mild memory loss associated with aging."

As the JAMA articled pointed out, these bogus brain supplement companies quote scientific articles that appear valid but lack essential features such as "sufficient participant characterization, treatment randomization and fail to include limitations." These bad papers are often published in predatory open-access journals.

In the case of Prevagen, despite marketing that includes "The Science Behind Prevagen," there isn't even a single study published in the peer-reviewed scientific literature -- predatory or otherwise.

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If you click on the "View the Study" link you will be taken to a PDF of the "," which is a study sponsored by Quincy Bioscience, performed by an employee of Quincy Bioscience and published in-house by Quincy Bioscience.

In the world of real science, this type of study is ignored and considered extremely preliminary until it is reproduced by a reputable unbiased scientific lab and published in a peer-reviewed journal. The chances for biased results are way too high to trust.

FTC Files Suit Against Quincy Bioscience

According to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which , the initial version of this company study found that Prevagen was no more effective than a placebo at improving any of the nine cognitive skills, including memory, that the company measured.

"The marketing for Prevagen is a clear-cut fraud, from the label on the bottle to the ads airing across the country," said New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. "It's particularly unacceptable that this company has targeted vulnerable citizens like seniors in its advertising for a product that costs more than a week's groceries, but provides none of the health benefits that it claims."

"The marketers of Prevagen preyed on the fears of older consumers experiencing age-related memory loss," said Jessica Rich, director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "But one critical thing these marketers forgot is that their claims need to be backed up by real scientific evidence."

seeks to fine Quincy and force it to pay back consumers who bought the pills.

Since then, Quincy went back and "re-analyzed" their in-house data, coming up with three parameters that improved and challenged the FTC in court. This process is called p-hacking and any significant findings gathered through this process are highly suspect.

A from the McGill University Office of Science and Society summarizes the problems with this re-analysis:

"This is an after-the-fact, unplanned exploration of the data to see if anything else of interest happened in the trial. Some might call it a fishing expedition. Scientists do this all the time, but with a big caveat: post hoc results are considered tentative, not conclusive. Before they're accepted as valid outcomes, they need to be confirmed by additional studies."

"That's because random events happen all the time in scientific studies. Some of them may seem statistically significant, but they're flukes and not the result of cause-and-effect. And the more post hoc analyses you do (like the more than 30 Quincy Bioscience did), the more likely you'll encounter these chance results."

"Scientists guard against accepting them as real by setting a high bar for statistical significance and by not accepting post hoc findings until they've been tested again."

Despite the total lack of proven efficacy and the lawsuit by the FTC, the company continues to heavily market Prevagen and reap millions of dollars in profits from the gullible. Prevagen is sold at the pharmacies of the companies shown , which should immediately remove this snake oil if their aim is to help consumers.

For a more in-depth analysis, see the deep dive by Jann Bellamy at Science-Based Medicine in

, is a private practice noninvasive cardiologist and medical director of echocardiography at St. Luke's Hospital in St. Louis. He blogs on nutrition, cardiac testing, quackery, and other things worthy of skepticism at , where a version of this post first appeared.