Literature DB >> 21383915

A combined Phase I and II open-label study on the immunomodulatory effects of seaweed extract nutrient complex.

Stephen P Myers1, Joan O'Connor, J Helen Fitton, Lyndon Brooks, Margaret Rolfe, Paul Connellan, Hans Wohlmuth, Phil A Cheras, Carol Morris.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Isolated fucoidans from brown marine algae have been shown to have a range of immune-modulating effects. This exploratory study aimed to determine whether a seaweed nutrient complex containing a blend of extracts from three different species of brown algae plus nutrients is safe to administer and has biological potential as an immune modulator. The study was undertaken as an open-label combined Phase I and II study.
METHODS: Participants (n = 10) were randomized to receive the study medication at either a 100 mg (n = 5) or 1000 mg (n = 5) dose over 4 weeks. The primary outcome measurement was in vivo changes in lymphocyte subsets. The secondary outcome measures were ex vivo changes in T-lymphocyte (CD4 and CD8) activation, phagocytosis of granulocytes and monocytes, T helper 1/T helper 2 cytokines, and serum oxygen radical absorbance capacity.
RESULTS: The preparation was found to be safe over the 4 weeks at both doses tested. There were no clinically relevant changes to blood measurements of hemopoietic, hepatic, or renal function. Immunomodulatory measurements showed no dose response between the two doses. The combined results from the two doses demonstrated a significant increase in cytotoxic T cell numbers and phagocytic capacity in monocytes, and a significant decrease in levels of the inflammatory cytokine interleukin 6. A separate analysis of the 100 mg dose (n = 5) alone showed a significant linear component over time (P < 0.05) for phagocytosis by both granulocytes and monocytes.
CONCLUSION: The seaweed nutrient complex was safe to use when taken orally over 4 weeks. The preparation was demonstrated to have potential as an immune modulator, and this bioactivity deserves further exploration.

Entities:  

Keywords:  complementary medicine; fucoidan; immune system; nutraceutical; seaweed

Year:  2011        PMID: 21383915      PMCID: PMC3044793          DOI: 10.2147/BTT.S12535

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biologics        ISSN: 1177-5475


Background

Marine algae have been used by humans as both a food and a medicine for thousands of years.1,2 The populations of Japan and Korea consume seaweed or ‘macroalgae’ every day, with daily consumption averaging 14.2 g in Japan3 and 6.6 g in Korea.4 A recent epidemiological study in Japan found that dietary seaweed was associated with lowered all-cause mortality and lower mortality from lung cancer for men and women, from pancreatic cancer for men, and from cerebrovascular disease for women.5 In pregnant Japanese women, dietary intake of seaweed has been associated with a decreased prevalence of allergic rhinitis.6 Although it is not considered a common part of Western diets, people in Western societies regularly ingest alginates and carrageenans derived from macroalgae as a component of foods, and therapeutic macroalgae preparations such as kelp are used as natural mineral supplements, especially for their iodine content.1,2 Commonly used dietary seaweeds include Undaria pinnatifida (wakame),7 Porphyra species (nori),8 Laminaria species (kelp, kombu),9 Palmaria palmata (dulse),10 and Fucus vesiculosus (bladder wrack).11 Fucoidans are considered to be one of the main therapeutic components of brown algae12 and constitute up to 25%–30% of the algae dry weight, depending on the specific seaweed species and, to a lesser extent, on season variation at time of harvesting.13 Structurally, the fucoidans are composed of sulfated homo- and heteropolysaccharides (including polysaccharides with a high content of glucuronic acid and a low content of fucose and sulfates) as well as polysaccharides built as sulfated homopolymers of fucose.13 In addition to fucose, they also contain other monosaccharides (eg, mannose, galactose, glucose, xylose), uronic acids, acetyl groups, and protein.12 The range of fucoidan structures is extremely diverse, as brown algae synthesize highly branched polysaccharides with species-specific sugar compositions. In addition, every species produces multiple types of fucoidans that can differ in the proportion of monosaccharide moieties.13 Brown marine algae in the form of seaweed extracts have been shown in animal studies to have a marked antitumor effect when delivered either intravenously or orally, an effect partly attributed to the stimulation of both innate and specific immunity.14–17 Isolated fucoidans from brown algae have been shown to have a range of immune-modulating effects. Ex vivo, Fucus-derived fucoidan had immunostimulating and maturing effects on bone marrow-derived dendritic cells, perhaps via the modulation of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB).18 In human monocyte-derived dendritic cells, fucoidan increased levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interferon gamma (IFN-γ), and interleukin 12 (IL-12). When naive T cells were stimulated by the fucoidan-treated dendritic cells, they differentiated towards a helper T cell type 1 (Th1).19 Fucus-derived fucoidan has been shown to stimulate the enzyme granzyme A, which is believed to induce the production of cytokines in a variety of cells, and may in part explain the immune-modulating mechanism of fucoidans.20 In animal studies, intravenously administered Fucus-derived fucoidan was observed to have a potent, long-lasting mobilizing effect on hemopoetic stem cells when injected into mice21,22 or primates.22 These cells replenish the immune cells in tissues and organs. In a mouse model, Cladosiphonderived fucoidan downregulated IL-6 (a Th2 cytokine) and ameliorated colitis.23 Other studies in mice have observed immunomodulatory effects chiefly by increasing the activity of natural killer (NK) cells and via a modulation of the Th1:Th2 ratio.24,25 In human studies, low levels of serum uptake of fucoidans were observed after ingestion of Undaria fucoidan, determined by using a novel antibody raised against sulfated polysaccharides.26 When this fucoidan was ingested over 12 days, it increased the amount of the chemokine stromal cell-derived factor 1 and also the number of chemokine receptor CXCR4-expressing hemopoetic stem cells. The levels of the chemokine IFN-γ also increased.27 The toxicity of seaweed extracts is generally very low. There were no toxicological changes observed in rats given up to 300 mg/kg orally of fucoidan from Laminaria japonica. Anticoagulant effects were observed at doses of 900–2500 mg/kg, but no other signs of toxicity were observed.28 A polyphenol-rich fraction of Fucus was also shown to lack acute toxic effects in rats after 4 weeks of oral dosing.29 We have recently demonstrated that a seaweed nutrition complex (containing a blend of extracts from three different species of brown algae plus nutrients zinc, manganese, and vitamin B6) has marked bioactivity in reducing the symptoms of osteoarthritis of the knee.30 To date, the mechanism of action for this effect is unknown. In this study, we examined the effects of the same preparation on the immune function of healthy individuals using an open-label design at two doses to determine immunomodulatory effects. This was a combined Phase I and II study aimed at determining acute safety and efficacy.

Methods

Research design

This trial was an exploratory study conducted as an open-label dosing study, with two different doses randomized to participants, conducted in 2008 over 4 weeks (28 days) in Lismore, a regional city in northern New South Wales (Australia). The study was approved by the Human Research Ethics Committee of Southern Cross University (Ethics approval number: ECN-07-36). The research was conducted in compliance with Good Clinical Practices and in accordance with the guidelines of the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and the Declaration of Helsinki (as revised in 2004). The trial was registered with the Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Register (ACTRN12607000228482).

Participants

A convenience sample of healthy individuals aged between 18 and 65 years was recruited by email from staff and students at Southern Cross University, and from Lismore and surrounding areas through newspaper advertising, regional radio, and television. All participants received a study information sheet outlining the study and signed an informed consent form agreeing to participate. A sample size of 10 participants was based on data from previous work undertaken at Southern Cross University on the number required in a pilot study to demonstrate changes in immune parameters. Participants were included if they were healthy, had neither an acute nor a chronic medical condition, and were nonsmokers. Participants were excluded if they were taking antioxidant medications and/or other dietary supplements; had poor venous access; had a history of any autoimmune disorders or diabetes; were taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, immune suppressant drugs, cytokines, interferon, echinacea, or other immune-stimulating herbs; had clinically abnormal liver function tests at baseline; developed a cold or other acute upper respiratory tract infection or influenza during the course of the study; were unwilling to have blood taken three times during the study; or were unwilling to comply with the study protocols.

Outcome measurements

Safety was assessed by actively monitoring adverse events and by a full blood count, liver function tests, and determination of urea, creatinine, electrolytes, cholesterol, and triglycerides taken at the first baseline measurement and at the conclusion of the study to assess toxicity to the hemopoietic, hepatic, and renal systems. Vital signs (pulse and blood pressure) and weight were also monitored at every measurement point. The primary efficacy outcome measurements were in vivo changes in lymphocyte subsets (mature T cells [CD3+], B cells [CD19+], helper T cells [CD3+, CD4+], cytotoxic T cells [CD3+, CD8+], and NK cells [CD3-CD16+ and/or CD56+]). The secondary outcome measures were ex vivo changes in T-lymphocyte (CD4, CD8) activation, phagocytosis by granulocytes and monocytes, T helper 1/T helper 2 cytokines (IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-10, IL-6, IL-4, IL-2), and serum oxygen radical absorbance capacity. Efficacy measurements were taken at day 1 (baseline), day 3, and day 28. Three measurements were taken in total, and participants attended three clinics during which weight, blood pressure, pulse rate, and concomitant medication use were recorded and fasting blood samples collected. Subjects returned all remaining capsules at each clinic, and these were counted as a measure of compliance. The investigator maintained an inventory record of all capsules received and dispensed. It was assumed that capsules not returned were taken. Participants were asked at the end of the study to evaluate the study medication by answering a question indicating their satisfaction, dissatisfaction, or neither satisfaction nor dissatisfaction with the study medication.

Study medication and dose

The study medication used Maritech® extracts (Marinova Pty Ltd, Hobart, Australia), which contains novel fucoidan-rich extracts of seaweeds and which are manufactured using a proprietary aqueous process that produces largely unaltered fucoidan fractions. They are complex ‘whole plant’ extracts that in addition to a substantial fucoidan concentration also contain significant levels of bioactive seaweed polyphenols (polyphloroglucinols) associated with the fucoidan molecule. In this study, we used a blend of three Maritech® extracts from different species of brown seaweeds: Maritech® Fucus vesiculosis (85% w/w), Maritech® Macrocystis pyrifera (10% w/w), and Maritech® Laminaria japonica (5% w/w). In addition, vitamin B6, zinc sulfate, and manganese sulfate were included in the formulation, as detailed in Table 1. The study medication was manufactured as 100 mg and 250 mg capsules (Gel Caps) under the code of Good Manufacturing Practice. The total fucoidan concentration in the 100 and 250 mg capsules was 75 and 187.5 mg, respectively.
Table 1

Contents of Maritech® extract capsules

Component100 mg250 mg
Maritech® Fucus vesiculosis85 mg212.5 mg
Maritech® Macrocystis pyrifera5 mg12.5 mg
Maritech® Laminaria japonica10 mg25 mg
Pyridoxine hydrochloride57.5 mg14.38 mg
Zinc sulfate monohydrate25 mg6.25 mg
Manganese sulfate4 mg1 mg
Subjects were randomized to either a 100 or 1000 mg dose group using the research randomizer website (www.randomizer.org). Five sets of two numbers per set, using a range of one to two, were generated. These numbers were used to assign the participants to either the 100 or 1000 mg dose. The 100 mg dose was delivered in one 100 mg gel capsule daily (taken in the morning) to five participants. The 1000 mg dose was delivered as four 250 mg capsules daily (two capsules taken twice daily) to five participants. The capsules were self-administered orally by the participants after food.

Laboratory assays

Lymphocyte subsets

Blood was collected in ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA) tubes (4 mL of blood per participant), stored at room temperature, and analyzed within 24 hours of collection. Flow cytometric analysis was used for the quantitation of T cells (including helper and suppressor subsets), B cells, and NK cells. Staining of peripheral blood leukocytes was performed by the lyse/no wash method using MultiTest IMK kit reagents (catalogue no. 340503, Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA, USA). Fifty microliters of whole blood (EDTA) was added to 20 μL of both fluorochrome-conjugated monoclonal antibodies (anti-CD3fluoresceinisothiocyanate [FITC]/CD8phycoerythrin [PE]/CD45peridinin chlorophyll protein [PerCP]/CD4allo-phycocyanin [APC] and anti-CD3FITC/CD [16 + 56] PE/CD45PerCP/CD19 APC). Tubes were vortexed and incubated for 15 minutes in the dark at room temperature. Four-hundred and fifty microliters of 1 × MultiTest Lysing Solution was added to each tube, vortexed, and incubated for 15 minutes in the dark at room temperature. Analysis was carried out on a four-color FACSCalibur Flow Cytometer and MultiSET Software (Becton Dickinson) using excitation wavelengths of 488 and 635 nm.

T cell activation

Lithium heparinized blood (4 mL per participant) was stored at room temperature and analyzed within 8 hours of collection. Lymphocyte activation was measured on whole blood according to the expression of an early activation marker (CD69) in T cells stimulated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA-M) (Phaseolus vulgaris, Sigma L2646, Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA). This was achieved using FastImmune T-cell Value Bundle II (catalogue no. 340408, Becton Dickinson) and flow cytometry to determine the population of activated T cells. In brief, 5 μL of 1 mg/mL PHA-M was added to 495 μL of whole blood, vortexed, and incubated for 4 hours at 37°C (5% CO2). Unstimulated controls were run in parallel for each participant. Aliquots (50 μL) of preincubated blood were then added to 10 μL of fluorochrome-labeled monoclonal antibodies (anti-γ1FITC/γ1PE/CD3PerCP, anti-CD4FITC/CD69PE/CD3PerCP, and anti-CD8FITC/CD69PE/CD3PerCP) in three separate tubes. The tubes were mixed and incubated for 15 minutes at room temperature in the dark. Four-hundred and fifty microliters of 1 × FACS Lysing Solution was added to each tube, vortexed, and incubated for 15 minutes in the dark at room temperature. The percentage of T cells (total T cells, CD4 + T cells, and CD8 + T cells) expressing CD69 was then determined using a four-color FACSCalibur Flow Cytometer and CellQuest Pro Software (Becton Dickinson).

Phagocytosis

Lithium heparinized blood (4 mL per participant) was stored at room temperature and analyzed within 8 hours of collection. Blood samples were assayed for granulocyte and monocyte phagocytic activity (post E. coli stimulation) by flow cytometry using the Phagotest kit (Orpegen Pharma 10-0100, Heidelberg, Germany). Aliquots (100 μL) of blood were precooled in an ice bath for 10 minutes. Each was spiked with 20 μL of FITC-labeled E. coli (diluted in saline to equivalent 5 × 106 bacteria), gently vortexed, then incubated at 37°C, and 0°C controls remained on ice. Activity was stopped by placing all tubes on ice simultaneously after 5 minutes of incubation. Cells were quenched (externally), washed, and red cells lysed using the solution provided in the kit. DNA stain solution (200 μL) was added to each tube to allow differentiation between free E. coli and human leukocytes. For each sample, the percentage of phagocytes (granulocytes and monocytes) that had ingested the fluorochrome-labeled bacteria (E. coli) was determined using a Becton Dickinson FACSCalibur Flow Cytometer.

Th1Th2 cytokine secretion

Lithium heparinized blood (4 mL per participant) was stored at room temperature and stimulated within 8 hours of collection. Cytokine secretion of blood, post ex vivo stimulation with PHA-M, was measured in plasma using the human Th1/Th2 Cytokine (CBA) Kit II (Becton Dickinson, catalogue no. 551809). In brief, 5 μL of 1 mg/mL PHA-M (Phaseolus vulgaris, Sigma L2646) was added to 495 μL of whole blood, vortexed, and incubated for 4 hours at 37°C (5% CO2). Unstimulated controls were run in parallel for each participant, and then vortexed and centrifuged for 5 minutes at 1500 g (room temperature), plasma was removed, and the samples stored at −80°C. Stored plasma samples were thawed, vortexed, and centrifuged (5 minutes, 3000 g, room temperature) immediately prior to analysis. The cytokine profiles (IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-10, IL-6, IL-4, IL-2) were determined for each sample using the standard CBA Kit protocol, which employs a series of capture beads with discrete fluorescence intensities to detect multiple cytokines in plasma. The samples were analyzed using a four-color FACSCalibur Flow Cytometer and CBA software.

Oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC)

Clotted blood (5 mL per participant) was centrifuged for 5 minutes at 1500 g, serum removed, and stored at −80°C. Stored serum samples were thawed, vortexed, and centrifuged for 3 minutes at 10,000 g at room temperature prior to analysis. The test sera were pretreated with 0.5 M perchloric acid (Sigma) and centrifuged for 3 minutes at 10,000 g at room temperature. Supernatants from each sample were serially diluted with 75 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) (Sigma) to give a dilution series of 1/8, 1/16, 1/32, and 1/64. Trolox (vitamin E analog) (Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland) and epicatechin (Sigma) were also diluted and run as a standard and control, respectively, with equivalent final concentrations of perchloric acid. Ten microliters of fluorescein (6.0 × 10−7 M) (Sigma) and 170 μL 2, 2′-azobis (2-amidinopropane) dihydrochloride (AAPH) (Wako, Richmond, VA, USA) were added to each 20 μL test sample, Trolox standard, and epicatechin control dilution in a 96-well microplate (Greiner, Frickenhausen, Germany). Fluorescence and blank controls were also run. Hydrophilic ORAC, assessed as the ability to protect fluorescein against AAPH degradation and standardized against Trolox, was measured using a Wallac Victor2 plate reader and expressed as Trolox equivalents (μmol TE/L).

Statistical methods

Blood safety measures, which included hematology and blood biochemistry measures, and lipid profile measures were analyzed by repeated-measures analysis with the within-subject time (day 1, day 28) main effect, the between-subject treatment (100 mg, 1000 mg) effect, and time by treatment interaction. The multivariate Wilks’ lambda statistic was used to assess the significance of effects involving time (main effect and interaction), and the treatment effect main effect was assessed with the univariate F test. Repeated-measures analysis of variance was conducted over the three measurement times (day 1, day 3, and day 28) for all immune function measures, including serum ORAC, and the model included the within-subject (repeated) time effect (day 1, day 3, day 28), the between-subject treatment main effect (100 mg, 1000 mg), and the time by treatment interaction. The multivariate Wilks’ lambda statistic was used to assess the significance of effects involving time (main effect and interaction) and the treatment effect main effect was assessed with the univariate F test. When any significant effects were present, Bonferroni-adjusted pairwise multiple comparisons were conducted to determine significant differences. In the case of significant multivariate time effects, decomposition into the linear and quadratic time components was also considered with treatments combined and/or treated separately. Where the linear decomposition occurred, univariate time effects when the sphericity assumption held were also presented. Treatments were considered separately if it appeared that either one of the treatments may have indicated a beneficial effect (all means increasing or decreasing). SPSS version 15 was used for all analyses, and the significance level was set to P = 0.05; however, as this was a pilot study, significance tests that resulted in P < 0.1 have also been highlighted.

Results

Study participants

The study screened 15 volunteers and subsequently enrolled 10 people who met the inclusion/exclusion criteria. All 10 participants completed the study and comprised nine females (mean age [±SD] 33.4 years [±9.36]) and one male (age 45 years). Five participants received the formulation in doses of 100 mg, and five received 1000 mg. There was a 95% compliance with participants taking 1000 mg daily, and 97.14% compliance in individuals taking 100 mg per day. The study medication was well tolerated, as all 10 participants evaluated their experience of taking the study medication as neither satisfied nor dissatisfied (they did not notice benefits or adverse effects). The mean (±SD) ages (years) of 33.6 (10.78) and 31.4 (9.58) for the 100 and 1000 mg arms, respectively, were not statistically different. Baseline means, standard deviations, minima and maxima for blood pressures, weight, and pulse rate for participants in each of the two study arms are reported in Table 2.
Table 2

Baseline blood pressure, weight, pulse rate: means (±SD) minima and maxima by treatment arm

Baseline100 mg
1000 mg
NMeanSDMinMaxNMeanSDMinMax
BPS (mmHg)5124.604.561181295113.006.00104120
BPD (mmHg)574.809.426287572.005.156780
Weight (kg)565.409.615375567.4009.505781
Pulse rate (per min)571.6014.795694560.009.704870

Abbreviations: BPD, diastolic blood pressure; BPS, systolic blood pressure; max, maximum; min, minimum; SD, standard deviation.

Only systolic blood pressure (P = 0.009) differed at baseline between the two treatments, with the 100 mg treatment group having an average systolic blood pressure mean of 124.6 (±4.56) mmHg significantly higher than the 1000 mg treatment group mean 113 (±6.00) mmHg.

Safety

The reports of adverse events were mild and self-limiting; however, the two participants who experienced an adverse event (hay fever n = 1; head cold n = 1) took one dose of Ibuprofen (a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent) on the last day of the fourth week of the study. The adverse events occurred in the last 2 days of the study and were not considered to be related to the medication. The descriptive statistics for blood safety measures (full blood count, liver function tests, and determination of urea, creatinine, electrolytes, cholesterol, and triglycerides) on days 1 and 28 are presented in Tables 3 and 4. The results of the repeated-measures analysis of variance using two measurement times (day 1 and day 28) with P-values for the time, treatment, and time by treatment effects are outlined in Tables 5 and 6. The only significant effect in these analyses was a significant treatment effect for potassium (P = 0.035), but the change was small and well within the clinical reference range so was assessed as not of clinical significance. Interestingly, the outcome measure for the cholesterol ratio showed near-significant beneficial change over time (P < 0.10).
Table 3

Blood safety: means, SD, minima, and maxima by treatment arm and measurement occasion

Measure100 mg
1000 mg
NMeanSDMinMaxNMeanSDMinMax
Hematology day 1
Red cell count (×1012/L)54.50.24.34.954.30.34.04.7
Hemoglobin (g/L)5138.26.7129.0147.05133.69.0123.0143.0
Hematocrit (%)50.410.020.390.4450.400.020.370.42
Mean corpuscular volume (fL)592.02.989.096.0591.81.990.095.0
White cell count (×109/L)56.11.74.68.956.10.55.56.9
Lymphocytes (×109/L)52.20.32.02.651.90.31.72.4
Monocytes (×109/L)50.40.10.30.550.50.20.30.8
Neutrophils (×109/L)53.41.52.25.953.40.43.04.0
Basophils (×109/L)50.00.10.00.150.00.00.00.0
Eosinophils (×109/L)50.10.10.10.350.20.10.10.4
Platelets (×109/L)5300.022.6277.0337.05287.479.3199.0369.0
Biochemistry day 1
Alkaline phosphatase (μ/L)554.211.241.064.0557.09.844.069.0
Serum alanine aminotransferase (μ/L)512.83.110.018.0513.44.58.020.0
Aspartate aminotransferase (μ/L)519.03.815.025.0518.62.416.021.0
Gamma glutamyl transferase (μ/L)514.85.49.023.0513.62.112.017.0
Bilirubin (μmol/L)510.82.87.014.0510.83.06.014.0
Protein (g/L)567.43.464.072.0569.02.966.073.0
Albumin (g/L)544.62.342.048.0544.02.841.047.0
Sodium (mmol/L)5138.61.3137.0140.05138.80.4138.0139.0
Potassium (mmol/L)53.70.13.63.954.10.43.74.7
Chloride (mmol/L)5106.41.3105.0108.05106.01.6104.0108.0
BUN/urea (mmol/L)53.91.12.75.254.01.12.75.8
Creatinine (mmol/L)571.07.564.080.0577.011.766.097.0
Hematology day 28
Red cell count (×1012/L)54.30.33.84.654.20.43.64.5
Hemoglobin (g/L)5136.010.2118.0143.05131.810.9114.0141.0
Hematocrit (%)50.400.030.350.4250.390.030.340.41
Mean corpuscular volume (fL)592.02.390.095.0592.01.990.095.0
White cell count (×109/L)55.90.94.97.155.71.14.07.0
Lymphocytes (×109/L)52.10.31.72.652.00.31.82.4
Monocytes (×109/L)50.40.10.30.550.60.10.50.8
Neutrophils (×109/L)53.10.92.34.653.40.82.34.3
Basophils (×109/L)50.00.10.00.150.00.00.00.0
Eosinophils (×109/L)50.20.10.10.450.20.10.00.3
Platelets (×109/L)5296.331.1271.0337.05278.859.2206.0351.0
Biochemistry day 28
Alkaline phosphatase (μ/L)558.610.747.069.0560.86.852.071.0
Serum alanine aminotransferase (μ/L)517.43.013.021.0525.618.810.058.0
Aspartate aminotransferase (μ/L)521.84.417.029.0525.07.317.037.0
Gamma glutamyl transferase (μ/L)513.44.39.020.0514.65.710.024.0
Bilirubin (μmol/L)511.44.27.017.0512.65.35.018.0
Protein (g/L)567.43.964.073.0568.23.064.071.0
Albumin (g/L)544.82.743.049.0543.62.641.047.0
Sodium (mmol/L)5139.40.9138.0140.05139.01.0138.0140.0
Potassium (mmol/L)54.00.23.74.254.20.33.94.6
Chloride (mmol/L)5107.41.8105.0110.05106.01.2105.0108.0
BUN/urea (mmol/L)54.00.33.84.555.01.72.56.4
Creatine (mmol/L)568.68.560.082.0578.618.964.0111.0

Abbreviations: BUN, blood urea nitrogen; max, maximum; min, minimum; SD, standard deviation.

Table 4

Lipid profile (mmol/L): means, SD, minima, and maxima by treatment arm and measurement occasion

Day100 mg
1000 mg
NMeanSDMinMaxNMeanSDMinMax
Cholesterol154.880.983.405.7053.940.383.404.30
2854.740.743.705.5053.920.813.105.10
HDL151.450.361.141.9451.180.210.941.48
2851.510.351.251.9951.250.390.841.83
LDL153.040.881.904.1052.340.292.002.70
2852.840.662.303.7052.260.431.902.90
Ratio cholesterol:HDL153.460.842.704.7053.400.382.803.80
2853.220.702.304.2053.240.402.803.90
Triglycerides150.900.340.501.4050.900.340.501.40
2850.860.370.401.4050.840.290.401.10

Abbreviations: HDL, high-density lipoprotein; LDH, low-density lipoprotein; max, maximum; min, minimum; SD, standard deviation.

Table 5

Blood safety measure: P-values for repeated measures analysis of variance

MeasureTimeTime by treatmentTreatment
Red cell count (×1012/L)0.0790.8970.441
Hemoglobin (g/L)0.3090.9160.445
Hematocrit (%)0.1720.7720.307
Mean corpuscular volume (fL)0.6080.6080.946
White cell count (×109/L)0.4190.8460.873
Lymphocytes (×109/L)0.7670.5570.319
Monocytes (×109/L)0.2760.3670.054
Neutrophils (×109/L)0.5670.5060.764
Eosinophils (×109/L)1.0000.3730.788
Platelets (×109/L)0.4420.7410.698
Alkaline phosphatase (μ/L)0.0650.8800.683
Serum alanine aminotransferase (μ/L)0.0890.4070.359
Aspartate aminotransferase (μ/L)0.0650.4280.537
Gamma glutamyl transferase (μ/L)0.8250.2071.000
Bilirubin (μmol/L)0.1750.4780.806
Protein (g/L)0.5910.5910.564
Albumin (g/L)0.8700.6260.576
Sodium (mmol/L)0.1870.4120.849
Potassium (mmol/L)0.1700.2200.035
Chloride (mmol/L)0.3680.3680.291
BUN/urea (mmol/L)0.2270.3020.429
Creatinine (mmol/L)0.8470.3470.306

Abbreviation: BUN, blood urea nitrogen.

Table 6

Cholesterol and triglycerides: P-values for repeated measures analysis of variance

OutcomeTimeTime by treatmentTreatment
Cholesterol0.6270.7140.089
HDL0.1580.9460.230
LDL0.4030.7150.105
Ratio cholesterol:HDL0.0870.7070.959
Triglycerides0.5610.9060.961

Abbreviations: HDL, high-density lipoprotein; LDH, low-density lipoprotein.

Immune function

The descriptive statistics for the lymphocyte subsets, phagocytic activity of monocytes and granulocytes, and cytokines on days 1, 3, and 28 are presented in Table 7. Only granulocyte levels (P = 0.025) differed at baseline between the two treatments, with the 100 mg treatment group having significantly lower mean levels (50.9% ± 4.43%) than the 1000 mg treatment group (59.87% ± 5.73%).
Table 7

Immune function means, SD, minima, and maxima by treatment arm and measurement occasion

OutcomeDay100 mg
1000 mg
NMeanSDMinMaxNMeanSDMinMax
T cells152.010.321.772.5551.930.451.582.55
352.190.361.832.7351.960.351.452.31
2851.930.351.632.4951.900.401.472.49
B cells CD19150.240.080.180.3850.250.080.160.38
350.240.090.130.3350.230.060.170.33
2850.180.080.100.3150.200.060.160.31
Helper T cells151.300.190.991.4651.280.250.921.57
351.440.430.881.9351.300.201.021.54
2851.280.240.861.4151.280.180.971.41
Cytotoxic T cells150.710.330.411.1950.660.310.411.19
350.760.260.451.1050.710.240.451.10
2850.660.280.411.1150.650.280.411.11
Natural killer cells150.280.100.160.3950.240.110.060.33
350.400.180.190.6750.350.210.080.67
2850.260.060.200.3350.240.090.080.32
Total T cells1532.329.1918.8042.30530.765.2724.2038.70
3528.969.4117.1040.60529.048.5120.5041.10
28534.5610.4716.7044.00533.566.1928.3044.00
Activation CD41530.169.1117.1040.30526.066.0117.7034.50
3527.009.3815.2038.70524.648.8415.0038.70
28531.349.7715.4040.50530.306.3623.1040.50
Activation CD81535.4811.3818.3046.40535.684.5130.4041.60
3529.0811.3714.8042.70531.229.1720.1040.40
28539.4213.5316.2051.60536.569.0729.5051.60
Granulocyte1550.924.4344.7155.62559.875.7349.8364.38
Phagocytosis3552.468.2741.6463.16563.159.2747.1869.11
28555.857.6645.1365.10562.524.7155.7567.76
Monocyte1537.795.5731.0244.58545.536.9836.3553.08
Phagocytosis3542.746.7333.5250.91548.274.6440.0050.93
28550.407.1841.0559.97551.994.7645.0256.96
IFN-gamma1598628943019,094514128982922490
3583026829015,336516416237322239
28573277247015,336512585743141777
IL-61520,955538817,54130,374523,509685815,47631,678
3522,108669615,47633,042524,195489420,10532,695
28516,022518110,95522,957518,864507313,80527,079
TNF-alpha1532821041183243435256412149194242
3561503413183211,2215218613807424067
285433719981409643354435124529246373
IL-101540.4021.1018.0066.00541.208.4728.0049.00
3547.8017.5428.0073.00549.0035.4318.00105.00
28529.2020.560.0057.00529.8023.690.0064.00
IL-21525.8015.350.0041.00520.2011.450.0028.00
3528.003.7422.0032.00527.409.4816.0041.00
28520.0019.390.0052.00515.2010.800.0030.00
IL-4150.000.000.000.0050.000.000.000.00
3520.6029.000.0061.0058.0017.890.0040.00
28511.4025.490.0057.00514.4013.160.0025.00

Abbreviations: IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; max, maximum; min, minimum; SD, standard deviation; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.

The results of the repeated-measures analysis of variance conducted over the three measurement points (day 1, day 3, and day 28) as the significance values (P-values) of the effects of time, time by treatment interaction, and treatment main effect for each of the immune function outcome measures are presented in Table 8. Only day 3 and day 28 measurements for IL-4 were used in the repeated-measures analysis of variance due to the absence of variation at day 1 (all scores were zero).
Table 8

Immune function outcomes: P-values for repeated measures analysis of variance

Immune function outcomeTimeTime by treatmentTreatment
T cells0.0770.4090.609
B cells CD190.0030.4860.900
Helper T cells0.4400.5760.727
Cytotoxic T cells0.0180.4980.837
Natural killer cells0.0980.8960.667
Total T cells0.1270.8530.871
Activation CD40.0520.3130.631
Activation CD80.0680.7030.977
Granulocyte phagocytosis0.0380.4960.060
Monocyte phagocytosis0.0050.3200.168
IFN-gamma0.4900.3790.059
IL-60.0040.9550.477
TNF-alpha0.2030.1170.087
IL-40.9010.4950.605
IL-100.2270.9990.935
IL-20.0770.6990.569

Abbreviations: IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.

None of the time by treatment effects was significant (P > 0.05), nor was any treatment main effect significant. However, the outcome measures of B cells (CD19), cytotoxic T cells, monocyte phagocytosis, and IL-6 showed a significant change over time (P < 0.05). Granulocyte phagocytosis demonstrated a significant increase over time (P = 0.038) and a near-significant difference between treatments averaged over time (P = 0.06). T cells, activation of CD4, activation of CD8, NK cells, and IL-2 showed near-significant changes over time (P < 0.1). IFN-γ and TNF-α, as well as granulocyte phagocytosis, showed near-significant changes (P < 0.1) between treatments averaged over time. Estimated time means (combined over treatments) and results of Bonferroni-adjusted pairwise comparisons for the significant time responses of B cells (CD19), cytotoxic T cells, monocyte phagocytosis, and IL-6 are reported in Table 9, and time by treatment means are graphically represented in Figure 1. For these immune function outcomes, the significant time effect always resulted in a significant difference between days 1 and 28. B cells and IL-6 decreased significantly over time (P = 0.003, P = 0.011, respectively), cytotoxic T cells increased (day 3) then decreased to day 28, and monocytes increased significantly from day 1 to day 28 (P = 0.002). A common pattern can be observed across several measures (eg, NK cells for 100 mg in Table 7) in which there is an increase to day 3 and a decrease by day 28, echoing the data for cytotoxic T cells.
Table 9

Estimated time means and multiple comparison results for B cells (CD19), cytotoxic T cells, monocyte phagocytosis, and IL-6

DayMeanSDLower 95%Upper 95%Multiple comparisons
B cells (CD19)10.2440.0260.1830.3051 versus 28 P = 0.003
30.2360.0240.1800.2923 versus 28 P = 0.069
280.1930.0230.1400.246
Cytotoxic T cells10.6860.1020.4510.9211 versus 28 P = 0.018
30.7360.0790.5530.9193 versus 28 P = 0.024
280.6530.0890.4480.8581 versus 3 P = 0.032
Monocyte phagocytosis141.6611.99637.05846.2641 versus 28 P = 0.002
345.5061.82841.29049.7223 versus 28 P = 0.031
2851.1941.92746.75155.637
IL-6122,232195017,73526,7291 versus 28 P = 0.011
323,152185418,87527,4283 versus 28 P = 0.003
2817,443162113,70321,182

Abbreviations: IL, interleukin; SD, standard deviation.

Figure 1

Mean by treatment over time for B cells (CD19) (A), cytotoxic T cells (B), monocyte phagocytosis (C), and interleukin-6 (D).

Estimated means for granulocyte phagocytosis by each treatment by time and combined treatment by time, as well as treatment averaged over time (combined), are presented together with the results of the Bonferroni-adjusted pairwise comparisons over time in Table 10 with graphical representations in Figure 2. There was a significant multivariate time effect (P = 0.038) with a near-significant univariate time effect (P = 0.070), which decomposed into a significant linear time contrast (P = 0.008) and a nonsignificant quadratic contrast (P = 0.759) for the treatments when considered together. Post hoc tests were consistent with this linear trend, with day 28 being significantly higher than day 1 (P = 0.025). When the two treatments were analyzed separately, the multivariate and univariate time effects were nonsignificant for each of the treatments (P = 0.125 and P = 0.147, respectively, for 100 mg, and P = 0.164 and P = 0.288, respectively, for 1000 mg), but there was a significant linear contrast for the 100 mg treatment (P = 0.038) and a nonsignificant linear contrast for the 1000 mg treatment (P = 0.146). In considering the near-significant treatment effect (the difference between treatments), the 100 mg treatment mean was lower (not significantly, P =0.06) than 1000 mg.
Table 10

Estimated time and treatment means for granulocyte phagocytosis

TreatmentDayMeanSDLower 95%Upper 95%Comparisons
100 mg150.922.2945.6456.21
352.463.9343.4061.52
2855.852.8549.2962.41
1000 mg159.872.2954.5965.15
363.153.9354.0972.21
2862.522.8555.9669.08
Combined155.381.6251.6659.131 versus 3 P = 0.563
357.802.7851.4064.211 versus 28 P = 0.025
2859.192.0154.5563.83
100 mgCombined53.082.8446.5459.62P = 0.060
1000 mgCombined61.852.8455.3168.39

Abbreviation: SD, standard deviation.

Figure 2

Mean by treatment over time for granulocyte phagocytosis.

As the data suggested that phagocytosis by monocytes and granulocytes and IL-6 behaved in a beneficial manner with the 100 mg treatment, separate repeated-measures analyses were performed on these immune response variables using the 100 mg treatment only (n = 5). The multivariate Wilks lambda significance and the univariate significance were used as an indication of significant time effects, and the significance of the decomposition of the univariate time effect into a linear component was used as an indication of the existence of a beneficial effect of the 100 mg treatment over time. Only phagocytosis by granulocytes and monocytes showed a significant linear component in a beneficial direction over time (P = 0.038 and P = 0.014, respectively). Estimated means, standard errors, and 95% confidence intervals for the immune responses of monocytes, granulocytes, and IL-6 for the 100 mg treatment, together with the significance values for the Wilks lambda test for the time effect, the univariate test for time, and the linear component over time, are presented in Table 11. Phagocytosis of granulocytes and monocytes for the 100 mg treatment over time are also shown in Figure 3.
Table 11

Estimated time means and significance of component effects for 100 mg treatment on specific immune responses

Immune responseDayMeanSDLower 95%Upper 95%Multivariate Wilks lambdaPUnivariate timePLinear componentP
Monocyte phagocytosis137.792.4930.8744.710.0680.0060.014
342.743.0134.3851.10
2850.403.2141.4859.31
Granulocyte phagocytosis150.921.9845.4256.420.1250.1470.038
352.463.7042.1962.72
2855.853.4346.33365.37
Production IL-6120,955.02409.714,264.627,645.40.1770.0320.061
322,108.02994.513,794.130,421.9
2816,021.62317.09588.622,454.6

Abbreviations: IL, interleukin; SD, standard deviation.

Figure 3

Means over time for 100 mg treatment for phagocytosis by monocytes (A) and granulocytes (B).

Serum ORAC

The descriptive statistics for serum ORAC on days 1, 3, and 28 are presented in Table 12. The results of the repeated-measures analysis of variance showed that serum ORAC significantly increased over time (P = 0.003), but the time by treatment effect and the treatment main effect were non-significant (P > 0.05). Estimated time means and the results of Bonferroni-adjusted pairwise comparisons are presented in Table 13, with time by treatment means illustrated in Figure 4.
Table 12

Serum ORAC (μmol Trolox equivalents/L): means, SD, minima, and maxima by treatment arm and measurement occasion

OutcomeDay100 mg
1000 mg
NMeanSDMinMaxNMeanSDMinMax
Serum ORAC15612.4092.654837305697.2064.59635805
35802.60134.055759075836.20115.257251,011
285764.40253.285751,2085890.40132.297461,025

Abbreviations: max, maximum; min, minimum; ORAC, oxygen radical absorbance capacity; SD, standard deviation.

Table 13

Estimated time means and multiple comparison results for serum ORAC

DayMeanSELower 95%Upper 95%Multiple comparisons
1654.825.255596.563713.0371 versus 3 P = 0.003
3819.439.529728.246910.5541 versus 28 P = 0.107
28827.463.894680.060974.740

Abbreviations: ORAC, oxygen radical absorbance capacity; SD, standard error.

Figure 4

Mean plots by treatment over time for serum ORAC (μmol Trolox equivalents/L).

Abbreviation: ORAC, oxygen radical absorbance capacity.

Discussion

This study investigated the acute safety and immunomodulatory effects of a seaweed nutrient complex containing a blend of extracts from three brown algae species (Fucus vesiculosis, Macrocystis pyrifera, and Laminaria japonica) plus vitamin B6, zinc, and manganese. The preparation was demonstrated to be safe over the course of the study. Adverse events experienced during the study were mild and self-limiting; there were no changes in hemopoetic, hepatic, or renal functions or in cholesterol and triglycerides of clinical significance; and the vital signs of participants remained healthy. This follows a study using the same preparation in 12 individuals with osteoarthritis over 12 weeks, which also demonstrated acute safety of the preparation.30 This study did not show a dose response effect in the efficacy outcomes between the two doses of the study preparation (100 mg and 1000 mg), as no discernible differences in any immune measure or the serum ORAC were found in the primary analysis. This may be explained by one of two possibilities. Firstly, the maximum effect was reached by the 100 mg dose, and no further response was possible at higher doses. Secondly, the study was not powered to discern such differences, which is a type II error. Given the small study numbers, it is more likely to be a type II error, and a larger study needs to be undertaken to determine dose responsiveness. Trends worthy of pursuit in a larger study include near-significant changes (P < 0.1) between treatments averaged over time, which were found for IFN-γ, TNF-α, and phagocytosis by granulocytes. The study did find significant time effects, suggesting that the combined results from both doses showed significant change over time for B cells (CD19), cytotoxic T cells, phagocytosis by monocytes, and IL-6. Comparisons for the significant time response showed that, between day 1 and day 28, B cells and IL-6 decreased significantly, phagocytosis by monocytes increased significantly, and cytotoxic T cells increased then decreased to day 28. Total T cells, activation CD4, activation CD8, NK cells, and IL-2 showed a near-significant change over time (P < 0.1). The separate repeated-measures analyses on phagocytosis by monocytes, phagocytosis by granulocytes, and IL-6 using only the 100 mg treatment demonstrated that phagocytosis by both granulocytes and monocytes showed a significant linear component. Serum ORAC similarly did not show a dose response effect between the two treatments but did demonstrate a significant time effect between day 1 and day 3 with the two treatments combined. This represented a 25% increase in serum ORAC by day 3, which is consistent with other natural antioxidants such as vitamin C and spinach.31 It has been suggested that sulfated polysaccharides from edible seaweeds could be used as natural antioxidants in the food industry.11 The antioxidant effects of manganese in the blend should also be considered as a contributor to this increased activity. However, the pattern of the results showed that the 1000 mg dose continued to increase in activity, whereas the 100 mg dose started to decline. Given that the level of manganese (and B6 and zinc) was the same for both doses, this suggests that seaweed constituents are responsible for at least part of the effect. This role of seaweed as an antioxidant is worth exploring in further research. Defense against invasive pathogens and the elimination of defective cells are coordinated between the innate and adaptive (specific) immune systems. The nonspecific innate immune system attacks pathogens quickly. This response includes NK cells and phagocytic cells. After a pathogen or defective cell is ‘recognized’, this response is backed by antigen-specific cells such as cytotoxic T cells. NK cells help to contain viral infections, and a lack of NK cells, either intrinsic or stress induced, is associated with vulnerability to viral infections.32 In this study, data at day 3 indicated significant increases in cytotoxic T cells and near-significant increases in NK cells. This short-term increase in cytotoxic T cells was accompanied by a continual increase in phagocytosis by monocytes and the near-significant increase in phagocytosis by granulocytes over the 28-day period. Monocytes and granulocytes are a critical part of the immune system and are responsible for the phagocytosis and destruction of foreign bodies such as bacteria.31 Overall, these data suggest an immune-priming role of the nutrient seaweed complex, which is worthy of further exploration. The significant linear component over time for phagocytosis by both monocytes and granulocytes when the 100 mg data were analyzed alone confirms that this dosage has an immunomodulatory effect. In addition to immune modulation, the complex has potential anti-inflammatory activity, exhibited by the significant decrease in IL-6 between day 1 and day 28. It is important to note that the measurement taken in this study was not of absolute serum levels of IL-6, which remains to be elucidated, but the amount of IL-6 produced by challenged cells. IL-6 is a multifunctional cytokine that is produced by many cell types, including leukocytes and endothelial cells. Levels of IL-6 were associated with increased cardiovascular risk in the Women’s Health Study.33,34 The levels of IL-6 were increased in women with cardiovascular events, and women with median levels of total cholesterol had increased risk if they had high levels of IL-6. This potential anti-inflammatory effect deserves further investigation, as any agent capable of reducing IL-6 may confer substantive health benefits. Serum antioxidant capacity increased significantly over the course of the study. Long-term increases in serum anti-oxidant status are correlated with improved health and with lower levels of IL-6,33 consistent with this study. The marked effect this preparation demonstrated in osteoarthritis30 with the 1000 mg dose reducing the symptoms by 52%, which is equivalent to the effect expected from a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug,35 coupled with the effect on IL-6 and serum antioxidant capacity, provides consistent evidence of anti-inflammatory activity. The outcome measure for the cholesterol ratio showed near-significant beneficial change over time (P < 0.10), which may reflect potential pharmacological activity. A number of seaweed species29–32 have been found to have hypolipidemic effects, which may well deserve further study. The role of the added nutrients in the preparation cannot be assessed independently, and the amount they contributed to the effects of the preparation is unknown. Adequate intake of micronutrients is required for the immune system to function efficiently,36,37 and specific nutrients were added to the complex to ensure their availability. Zinc is known to play a role in the immune system; however, its precise roles and mechanisms have not yet been resolved.38 Vitamin B6 deficiency is known to depress both humoral and cell-mediated immune responses.39 A dose of 50 mg daily, equivalent to this study, significantly increased T-lymphocyte and T-helper cell numbers and the percentage of T-suppressor cells in 14 days in a group of critically ill intensive care patients40 who were likely to have some degree of immunocompromise. Although we did not see these changes in this study, it is likely that the participants had adequate vitamin B6 intake, given that substantially increased doses of vitamin B6 do not produce added benefits.39 A limitation of the study design was that the 100 mg dose was delivered once per day as a single capsule (in the morning), and the 1000 mg dose was delivered twice per day (two 250 mg capsules morning and night, four capsules total per day). Differences in the number of capsules and the dosing schedule between the groups may have had a bearing on the observed outcomes. Other areas of potential bias include gender and diet. Participants in this study comprised nine females and one male, placing an emphasis on the potential effects of female physiology, which may not be generalizable to male physiology. The participants’ background diets need to be assessed, as they may vary widely in the intake of seaweed products and land-based fruits and vegetables, which may have an effect on serum ORAC and other laboratory parameters. Further rigorous study needs to eliminate these areas of potential bias. One shortcoming of seaweed extract and fucoidan research to date has been the lack of data from clinical settings and in vivo models, especially at clinically viable dosage levels. The methods used to prepare extracts of fucoidan from seaweed vary from laboratory preparations to commercial extraction methods, where heat and ethanol may be used during extraction and possibly solvent precipitation. The differences in extraction methods may result in inconsistent biological activity. Lowering the molecular size of fucoidans by more extensive chemical processing has been shown to inactivate in vivo enzyme inhibitory activity against phospholipase-A2.41 For this reason, it has been postulated that the novel aqueous extraction process used in the development of this study medication, which produces largely unaltered fucoidan fractions, may be more clinically effective. Further research is necessary to determine the best method for delivering therapeutic benefits from seaweeds. This study was an exploratory study, and it is important that it is not over-interpreted. The most significant limitation was that it was an open-label combined Phase I and II trial and therefore was subject to potential bias, which would be reduced by the use of randomization and blinding. This study aimed to explore the potential bioactivity of the preparation on immune function and determine a safe and effective dose that can be used in a more rigorous clinical trial design. This study achieved these aims and demonstrated that the study medication at 100 mg has the potential to act as an immunomodulator.

Conclusion

A complex containing a blend of seaweed extracts and nutrients when taken orally over 4 weeks was demonstrated to be safe to use over the study period at the doses tested. The 100 mg dose was shown to be immunomodulatory, and this pharmacological activity now needs to be demonstrated in a Phase III randomized controlled trial with an appropriate sample size.
  39 in total

Review 1.  The nutrition transition in South Korea.

Authors:  S Kim; S Moon; B M Popkin
Journal:  Am J Clin Nutr       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 7.045

2.  Sulfated glycans induce rapid hematopoietic progenitor cell mobilization: evidence for selectin-dependent and independent mechanisms.

Authors:  P S Frenette; L Weiss
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2000-10-01       Impact factor: 22.113

Review 3.  An evidence-based update on nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

Authors:  C K S Ong; P Lirk; C H Tan; R A Seymour
Journal:  Clin Med Res       Date:  2007-03

4.  Sulfated polysaccharides increase plasma levels of SDF-1 in monkeys and mice: involvement in mobilization of stem/progenitor cells.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Sweeney; Hugues Lortat-Jacob; Gregory V Priestley; Betty Nakamoto; Thalia Papayannopoulou
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2002-01-01       Impact factor: 22.113

Review 5.  Selected vitamins and trace elements support immune function by strengthening epithelial barriers and cellular and humoral immune responses.

Authors:  Silvia Maggini; Eva S Wintergerst; Stephen Beveridge; Dietrich H Hornig
Journal:  Br J Nutr       Date:  2007-10       Impact factor: 3.718

6.  Serum antioxidants, inflammation, and total mortality in older women.

Authors:  J Walston; Q Xue; R D Semba; L Ferrucci; A R Cappola; M Ricks; J Guralnik; L P Fried
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2005-11-23       Impact factor: 4.897

7.  Potential antioxidant capacity of sulfated polysaccharides from the edible marine brown seaweed Fucus vesiculosus.

Authors:  Pilar Rupérez; Oussama Ahrazem; J Antonio Leal
Journal:  J Agric Food Chem       Date:  2002-02-13       Impact factor: 5.279

Review 8.  The dietary intake of Laminaria, a brown seaweed, and breast cancer prevention.

Authors:  J Teas
Journal:  Nutr Cancer       Date:  1983       Impact factor: 2.900

9.  Antileukemic activity of Viva-Natural, a dietary seaweed extract, on Rauscher murine leukemia in comparison with anti-HIV agents, azidothymidine, dextran sulfate and pentosan polysulfate.

Authors:  E Furusawa; S Furusawa; S C Chou
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  1991-03       Impact factor: 8.679

10.  Seaweed prevents breast cancer?

Authors:  H Funahashi; T Imai; T Mase; M Sekiya; K Yokoi; H Hayashi; A Shibata; T Hayashi; M Nishikawa; N Suda; Y Hibi; Y Mizuno; K Tsukamura; A Hayakawa; S Tanuma
Journal:  Jpn J Cancer Res       Date:  2001-05
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  17 in total

1.  A Pragmatic Approach to Immunity & Respiratory Viral Infections.

Authors:  Todd A Born
Journal:  Integr Med (Encinitas)       Date:  2020-10

Review 2.  Phytochemical and Potential Properties of Seaweeds and Their Recent Applications: A Review.

Authors:  Hossam S El-Beltagi; Amal A Mohamed; Heba I Mohamed; Khaled M A Ramadan; Aminah A Barqawi; Abdallah Tageldein Mansour
Journal:  Mar Drugs       Date:  2022-05-24       Impact factor: 6.085

Review 3.  An Overview to the Health Benefits of Seaweeds Consumption.

Authors:  Silvia Lomartire; João Carlos Marques; Ana M M Gonçalves
Journal:  Mar Drugs       Date:  2021-06-15       Impact factor: 5.118

Review 4.  Therapies from fucoidan; multifunctional marine polymers.

Authors:  Janet Helen Fitton
Journal:  Mar Drugs       Date:  2011-09-30       Impact factor: 6.085

5.  Effects of Laminaria japonica polysaccharides on airway inflammation of lungs in an asthma mouse model.

Authors:  Rongjun Lin; Xiaomei Liu; Yan Meng; Mei Xu; Jianping Guo
Journal:  Multidiscip Respir Med       Date:  2015-06-11

6.  Antioxidant, antiproliferative, and antiangiogenesis effects of polyphenol-rich seaweed (Sargassum muticum).

Authors:  Farideh Namvar; Rosfarizan Mohamad; Javad Baharara; Saeedeh Zafar-Balanejad; Fahimeh Fargahi; Heshu Sulaiman Rahman
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2013-09-04       Impact factor: 3.411

7.  Effects of fucoidan from Fucus vesiculosus in reducing symptoms of osteoarthritis: a randomized placebo-controlled trial.

Authors:  Stephen P Myers; Ann M Mulder; Don G Baker; Shelley R Robinson; Margaret I Rolfe; Lyndon Brooks; J Helen Fitton
Journal:  Biologics       Date:  2016-05-26

Review 8.  Fucoidans in Nanomedicine.

Authors:  Lucas Chollet; Pierre Saboural; Cédric Chauvierre; Jean-Noël Villemin; Didier Letourneur; Frédéric Chaubet
Journal:  Mar Drugs       Date:  2016-07-29       Impact factor: 5.118

9.  Effects of scavenger receptors-1 class A stimulation on macrophage morphology and highly modified advanced glycation end product-protein phagocytosis.

Authors:  Shinichi Hamasaki; Takuro Kobori; Yui Yamazaki; Atsuhiro Kitaura; Atsuko Niwa; Takashi Nishinaka; Masahiro Nishibori; Shuji Mori; Shinichi Nakao; Hideo Takahashi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-04-12       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 10.  Fucoidan as a marine anticancer agent in preclinical development.

Authors:  Jong-Young Kwak
Journal:  Mar Drugs       Date:  2014-01-28       Impact factor: 5.118

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