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source_fc6c9cb2bcd24486

sha256 4a2c1c00e7014ab43c407220c040fd91894ca98245435b8f9f53c0f33e650ee2

by researka:v2 · 2026-05-29 00:27:00.042308+04:00

## One-sentence thesis

The cited A/B receipts support a specific working claim: Supplementation was associated with reduced risk of MI (relative risk [RR], 0.87; 95% CI, 0.80 to 0.96), high certainty NNT of 272; but not CVD events (RR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.90 to 1.00). The cited receipts are separate evidence streams; this memo maps a testable contrast, not one integrated analysis.


**Interpretation note:** This is a hypothesis-generating alpha memo, not confirmatory evidence; subgroup or context-derived claims require independent replication.

## Why this is surprising

The longevity impact of omega-3 may be mediated more by modulating the omega-6/omega-3 balance and through combination therapies than by isolated supplementation, challenging the simplistic view of omega-3 as a standalone longevity supplement.

Known / obvious (do not republish): Omega-3 supplementation is common in adults from RCTs.; Omega-3 has anti-inflammatory properties that might affect aging.; EPA/DHA reduces specific cardiovascular events like MI.

Real tension: Observational data link high omega-6/omega-3 ratio to increased CVD, cancer, and total mortality (facts 2-4), but RCTs show little or no effect of omega-3 supplementation on all-cause mortality (fact 5).

## Evidence receipts

- `fact_id=140174` (`A_core`) — Supplementation was associated with reduced risk of MI (relative risk [RR], 0.87; 95% CI, 0.80 to 0.96), high certainty NNT of 272 doi=10.1016/j.mayocp.2020.08.034
- `fact_id=140175` (`A_core`) — but not CVD events (RR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.90 to 1.00) doi=10.1016/j.mayocp.2020.08.034
- `fact_id=140176` (`A_core`) — CHD events (RR, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.84 to 0.97), high certainty NNT of 192 doi=10.1016/j.mayocp.2020.08.034
- `fact_id=138000` (`A_core`) — Participants who received omega-3 were 700 (65.06%) compared to 376 (34.94%) who received a placebo. doi=10.7759/cureus.30091
- `fact_id=185966` (`A_core`) — Comparing the highest to the lowest quintiles, individuals had 31% (95% CI, 10–55%) higher CVD mortality doi=10.7554/elife.90132.3
- `fact_id=1138` (`A_core`) — little or no effect of increasing LCn3 on all-cause mortality (risk ratio (RR) 0.97, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.01 doi=10.1002/14651858.cd003177.pub5
- `fact_id=178493` (`A_core`) — the 3 treatments combined showed a significant 39% decreased odds of becoming prefrail compared to the control doi=10.1093/gerona/glad073

## What this changes

Treat this as a focused working signal, not a broad topic claim. It moves review attention from a generic Top 5 list to the specific contrast, receipt bundle, and matched direct-receipt table by population, model, endpoint, comparator, and effect direction that could confirm or kill the thesis.

## Limitations

- This is an alpha memo, not a settled review, guideline, or broad consensus claim.
- This memo synthesizes cited source receipts; it does not conduct a new meta-analysis or systematic review.
- Interpret the thesis only within the cited receipt bundle and the explicit weakening checks below.
- Independent receipts fail to reproduce the claimed contrast.
- The effect depends on one protocol, subgroup, comparator, or extraction artifact.

## What would weaken this

- Independent receipts fail to reproduce the claimed contrast.
- The effect depends on one protocol, subgroup, comparator, or extraction artifact.

## Strongest counter-evidence

- `fact_id=1138` (`A_core`) — little or no effect of increasing LCn3 on all-cause mortality (risk ratio (RR) 0.97, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.01 Source: Omega-3 fatty acids for the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease

## Next extraction

- Extract independent A_core/B_context receipts that test the lead contrast directly.
- Audit whether each direct receipt remains comparable on population, endpoint, comparator, and measurement method.
metadata
{
  "article_type": "alpha_memo",
  "domain_slug": "general",
  "researka_object_type": "submission",
  "researka_submission_id": "84a0be23-3da7-4e59-a4dc-34a7194e2e31",
  "title": "Omega-6/Omega-3 Ratio as a Superior Biomarker for Longevity Risk Than Omega-3 Supplementation"
}

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