| Literature DB >> 22254046 |
Ruben Hummelen1, Jaimie Hemsworth, Gregor Reid.
Abstract
Low serum concentrations of micronutrients, intestinal abnormalities, and an inflammatory state have been associated with HIV progression. These may be ameliorated by micronutrients, N-acetyl cysteine, probiotics, and prebiotics. This review aims to integrate the evidence from clinical trials of these interventions on the progression of HIV. Vitamin B, C, E, and folic acid have been shown to delay the progression of HIV. Supplementation with selenium, N-acetyl cysteine, probiotics, and prebiotics has considerable potential, but the evidence needs to be further substantiated. Vitamin A, iron, and zinc have been associated with adverse effects and caution is warranted for their use.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; HIV; N-acetyl cysteine; micronutrients; prebiotics; probiotics; selenium; zinc
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22254046 PMCID: PMC3257666 DOI: 10.3390/nu2060626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Randomized controlled trials on vitamin B, C, D, E and folic acid, and HIV progression.
| Reference | Population, in- and exclusion criteria. | Intervention and follow-up | Primary outcomes | Major findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allard 1998 [ | Canada, 49 individuals receiving ART. | Daily vit. E (800 IU) and C (1000mg) for 3 months. | HIV viral load, oxidative stress | Trend towards reduction in viral load. Significant reduction of oxidative stress. | Vit. E and C may reduce viral load and reduces oxidative stress. |
| Kelly 1999 [ | Zambia, 141 ART naïve patients admitted with diarrhea. | Daily vit. A (10.500 IU), C (300 mg), E (300 mg) Selenium (300 μg) and Zinc (200 mg) for two weeks. | Diarrhea, mortality, serum A and E, CD4 count. | No difference in length of diarrheal episodes, mortality or CD4 count after 6 weeks. | No additional value of multivitamin to treatment of diarrhea among HIV patients. |
| Fawzi 1998.[ | Tanzania, 1078 ART naïve pregnant women. | Multifactorial design with Vit. B, C, E and folic acid1. | MTCT, Mortality, CD4 count and viral load. | No effect on MTCT, Reduced mortality, delayed HIV progression, increased CD4, CD8 count and decreased viral load for the multivitamin. | Multivitamin does not reduce MTCT but reduces HIV progression and mortality among children and pregnant women. |
| Jiamton 2003 [ | Bangkok, 481 ART naïve individuals with CD4 count 50 - 500 cells/μL. | Daily vit. A, B, C, D, E, K, zinc, selenium and various minerals2 for 48 weeks. | Mortality, CD4 count | Reduction of mortality with no differences in viral load and CD4 count. | Micronutrients reduce mortality among people living with HIV. |
| McClelland 2004 [ | Kenya, 400 ART naïve women. | Daily vit. B, C, E, folic acid1 and selenium (200 mg) for 6 weeks. | HIV infectivity | Increase in HIV infectivity. Increase in CD4 and CD8 count and no difference in viral load. | Multivitamin may increase HIV infectivity. |
| Kaiser 2006 [ | United states, 40 individuals receiving ART and signs of ART related neuropathy. | Twice daily vit. A, B, C, D, E, zinc, selenium, NAC and various minerals3 for 12 weeks. | CD4 count, viral load, neuropathy, safety parameters. | Intervention increased CD4 count with no effect on viral load or neuropathy. | Micronutrients and NAC increases CD4 count and was found to be safe. |
| Kelly 2008 [ | Uganda, cluster randomized trial among 500 individuals of which 135 HIV infected and ART naïve. | Daily vit.A, B, C, D, E, folic acid, selenium, iron, zinc, copper, iodine4. | Diarrhea incidence, CD4 count, mortality. | Intervention did not reduce the incidence of diarrhea. No effect on CD4 count but decrease in mortality. | Low dose multivitamin may reduce mortality. |
| Wejse 2009 [ | Guineau-Bassau, West Africa, 367 TB-infected, 131 co-infected with HIV and ART naïve. | Vitamin D 100,000 IU every 3 months for 12 months | Clinical severity score of TB and overall mortality at 12 months | No difference in clinical severity or mortality between vitamin D and control group. | Vit. D not effective at improving clinical outcomes of TB. |
MTCT = Mother to child transmission, TB = Tuberculosis
1. Micronutrient supplement included vitamin B1 20 mg , vitamin B2 20 mg, vitamin B6 25 mg, vitamin B3 100 mg, vitamin B12 50 μg, vitamin C 500 mg and folic acid 0.8 mg.
2. Micronutrient supplement included vitamin A 3,000 μg, beta-carotene 6 mg, vitamin D3 20 μ g, vitamin E 80 mg, vitamin K 180 μg, vitamin C 400 mg, vitamin B1 24 mg, vitamin B2 15 mg, vitamin B6 40 mg, vitamin B12 30 μg, folacin 100 μ g, panthothenic acid 40 mg, iron 10 mg, magnesium 200 mg, manganese 8 mg, zinc 30 mg, iodine 300 μg, copper 3 mg, selenium 400 μg, chromium 150 μg and cystine 66 mg.
3. Micronutrient supplement included N-acetyl cysteine 1,200 mg , acetyl L-carnitine 1,000 mg, α-lipoic acid 400 mg, β-carotene 20,000 IU, vitamin A 8,000 IU, vitamin C 1,800 mg, thiamine 60 mg , riboflavin 60 mg, pantothenic acid 60 mg, niacinamide 60 mg, inositol 60 mg, vitamin B6 260 mg, vitamin B12 2.5 mg, vitamin D 400 IU, vitamin E 800 IU, folic acid 800 μg, Ca 800 mg, Mg 400 mg, Se 200 μg, Iodine 150 μg, Zn 30 mg, Cu 2 mg, B 2 mg, K 99 mg, Fe 18 mg, Mn 10 mg, biotin 50 μg, Cr 100 μg, Mo 300 μg, choline 60 mg, bioflavonoid complex 300 mg, L-glutamine 100 mg, and betaine HCL 150 mg.
4. Micronutrient supplement included Vitamin A as β-carotene 4,8 mg, vitamin B1 1,4 mg , vitamin B2 1,4 mg, vitamin B6 1,6 mg, vitamin B12 2,6 μg, vitamin C 18 mg, vitamin D35 mg, vitamin E 10 mg, iron 30 mg, zinc 15 mg, copper 12 mg, selenium 65 μg iodine 150 μg and folic acid 400 μg.
Randomized controlled trials on iron supplementation and HIV progression.
| Reference | Population, in- and exclusion criteria | Intervention and follow-up | Primary outcomes | Major findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olsen 2004 [ | Kenya, 45 ART naïve HIV patients. | 60 mg iron twice weekly for 4 months. | HIV viral load. | No increase in HIV viral load. | Low dose iron can be safely administered. |
| Semba 2007 [ | United States, 485 HCV infected of which 138 co-infected with HIV of whom 50 receiving ART. | 18 mg iron daily for 12 months. | HCV and HIV viral load, anemia. | No increase in HCV or HIV viral load. Reduced occurrence of anemia. | Iron is safe administered and is effective in treating anemia. |
HCV = Hepatitis C Virus.
Randomized controlled trials on zinc and HIV progression.
| Reference | Population, in- and exclusion criteria | Intervention and follow-up | Primary outcomes | Major findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mocchegiani 1995 [ | Italy, 57 AZT treated patients. At risk or developed AIDS. | Zinc (45 mg) for 30 days. | Incidence opportunistic infections, body weight. | Reduction opportunistic infections, stabilization or increase body weight, CD4 count, thymulin. | Zinc increases CD4 count. |
| Bobat 2005 [ | South Africa, 96 ART naïve children. | Daily zinc (10 mg) for 6 months. | CD4 count, viral load and diarrhea incidence. | No difference in CD4 count or viral load but a reduction in watery diarrhea. | Zinc safe among children with HIV. |
| Fawzi 2005 [ | Tanzania, 400 ART naïve pregnant women. | Daily zinc (25 mg) additional to multivitamin 1 until 6 weeks after delivery. | CD4 count, viral load and MTCT. | No effects on CD4 count, viral load and MCTC but adverse effects on haemoglobin level and an increase risk of wasting. | Zinc has no impact on HIV progression and may cause adverse effects. |
MTCT = Mother to child transmission; 1. Micronutrient supplement included vitamin B1 20 mg , vitamin B2 20 mg, vitamin B6 25 mg, vitamin B3 100 mg, vitamin B12 50 μg, vitamin C 500 mg and folic acid 0.8 mg.
Randomized, placebo controlled trials on selenium and HIV progression.
| Reference | Population, in- and exclusion criteria | Intervention and follow-up | Primary outcomes | Major findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Constans 1996 [ | France, 52 individuals receiving ART. | Selenium (100 μg)
| CD4 count and serum anti-oxidant level. | Both selenium and β-carotene did not have an impact on the CD4 count but enhanced serum antioxidant levels. | Selenium and β-carotene improve anti-oxidant status. |
| Burbano 2002 [ | United states, 186 injection drug users of whom 124 receiving ART. | Daily Selenium (200 μg) for 2 years. | CD4 count and hospital admissions | No differences in CD4 count and viral load. Reduction in number with drop in CD4 count of >50 cells/μL and risk of admission was lower. | Selenium may reduce decline in CD4 count and risk of hospital admission. |
| Hurwitz2007 [ | United states, 262 individuals of whom 192 receiving ART | Daily selenium (200 μg) for 9 months. | CD4 count, viral load. | Increase in CD4 count, and decrease in viral load. | Selenium reduces HIV progression. |
| Kupka 2008 [ | Tanzania, 913 ART naïve pregnant women. | Daily selenium (200 μg) until 6 months after delivery. | Mortality, CD4 count, viral load. | No differences in mortality, CD4 count or viral load. | Selenium does not affect HIV progression. |
Randomized, placebo controlled trial on cysteine and HIV progression.
| Reference | Population, in- and exclusion criteria | Intervention and follow-up | Primary outcomes | Major findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akerlund 1991 [ | Sweden, 45 ART naïve individuals with CD4 > 200 cells/uL | Daily NAC (400 mg) for 4 months. | CD4 count and clinical signs and symptoms | No effect on CD4 count. But increased level of GSH, reduced TNFα levels and reduced decline of CD4 count than before baseline. | NAC may reduce decline in CD4 count and restores GSH levels. |
| Herzenberg1997 [ | United states, 246 individuals with low glutathione levels (ART status unknown). | Daily NAC (3.2–8.0 g) for 8 weeks, followed by open label treatment for 2 years. | Mortality, GSH levels. | Supplementation restored GSH levels and reduced mortality. | NAC restores GSH levels and may reduce mortality. |
| Look 1998 [ | Germany, Cross-over RCT, 24 ART naïve individuals. | Daily NAC (0.6 g) and selenium (500 μg) for 24 weeks. | CD4 count, GSH levels | Trend towards increase in CD4 count and CD4/CD8 ratio at particular time points, no increase in GSH level. | NAC and selenium may improve immune status. |
| Breitkreutz 2000 [ | Germany, 29 ART naïve individuals. | Daily NAC (0.6–3.6 g) for 7 months. | CD4 count, GSH levels | Supplementation restored GSH levels, no difference in CD4 or CD8 cells but increase in NK cell activity. | NAC restores GSH levels and may enhance antiviral response. |
| Micke 2002 [ | Germany, 30 individuals receiving ART. | Daily whey protein (45 g) for 6 months. | GSH levels, CD4 count and body weight. | Increase in GSH levels, no differences in CD4 count or body weight. | Whey protein increases GSH levels. |
| Sattler 2008 [ | United states, 59 individuals receiving ART. | Daily whey protein (40 g) for 12 weeks. | Weight, lean body mass | No difference in weight or lean body mass, but significant increase in CD4 count. | Whey protein increases CD4 count. |
NAC = N-acetyl cysteine, GSH = gluthathione
Randomized, placebo controlled trials on probiotics and prebiotics and HIV progression.
| Reference | Population, in- and exclusion criteria | Intervention and follow-up | Primary outcomes | Major findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trois 2007 [ | Brazil, 77 children (42 receiving ART). | Daily
| CD4 count and diarrhea prevalence. | Increase in CD4 count, no reduction in diarrhea prevalence. | The candidate probiotic strains may increase CD4 count among children. |
| Land 2008 [ | Italy, 57 ART naïve individuals. | Daily prebiotic 15 g or 30 g for 12 weeks1. | NK cell activity and CD4 cell activation. | Increased NK cell activity, reduced CD4
| Prebiotics may reduce HIV associated hyper-immune activation and enhance anti-viral response. |
| Anukam 2008 [ | Nigeria, 24 ART naïve women | Daily
| CD4 count and resolution of diarrhea | Increase in CD4 count and faster resolution of diarrhea. | The probiotics may increase the CD4 count and reduce the length of diarrheal episodes. |
| Kerac 2009 [ | Malawi, 361 ART naïve children with malnutrition. | Daily Synbiotic Forte 20001 for 9 months. | Nutritional cure, mortality. | No difference in nutritional cure but trend towards reduced mortality. | Synbiotic may reduce mortality. |
| Lange 2009 [ | Various countries, 340 ART naïve individuals. | Daily prebiotics, NAC, bovine colostrum, omega-3 PUFA’s and micronutrients for one year2. | CD4 count and viral load. | Increase in CD4 count, no decrease in viral load. | Intervention increases CD4 count and may delay the progression of HIV. |
CFU = colony forming unit, NAC = N-acetyl cysteine, NK = natural killer
1. Synbiotic included, Pediococcus pentosaceus, Leuconostoc mesenteroides, Lactobacillus paracasei ssp paracasei, and Lactobacillus plantarum (10¹¹ colony-forming units of bacteria total) and four prebiotic fermentable bioactive fibers (2.5 g of each per 10¹¹ bacteria) (oat bran [rich in β-glucans], inulin, pectin, and resistant starch).
2. Formula included short-chain Galactooligosaccharides (scGOS), long-chain Fructooligosaccharides (lcFOS) and Acidic Oligosaccharides from pectin hydrolysate (AOS) (ratio 9,1,10), NAC, bovine colostrum, omega-3 PUFA’s and micronutrients.
Randomized controlled trials on vitamin A and HIV progression.
| Reference | Population, in- and exclusion criteria. | Intervention and follow-up | Primary outcomes | Major findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fawzi 1998 [ | Tanzania, 1078 ART naïve pregnant women. | Multifactorial design with Vit. A (5000 IU) and β-carotene (30 mg) daily during pregnancy and lactation. | Mortality, CD4 count and viral load. | No differences in mortality, CD4 count or viral load among women or children. Vit. A increased MCTC. | Vit. A does not reduce mortality among women but increased MTCT. |
| Fawzi 1999 [ | Tanzania, 58 ART naïve children admitted with pneumonia. | Dose vit. A (400,000 IU) at baseline, 4 and 8 months. | Mortality | Reduced overall and AIDS related mortality. Reduction on diarrhea related death. | Vit. A reduces mortality among children admitted with acute infections. |
| Coutsoudis 1999 [ | South-Africa, 728 ART naïve pregnant women. | Vit. A (5000 IU), β-carotene (30 mg) third trimester and vit. A (200,000 IU) at delivery. | MCTC, fetal and infant mortality. | No reduction in MCTC, fetal or infant mortality. Reduction in preterm delivery. | Vit. A administered to the mother does not affect fetal or infant mortality or MCTC. |
| Kumwenda 2002 [ | Malawi, 697 ART naïve pregnant women. | Vit. A (3 mg) daily from 18-28 weeks of gestation until delivery. | MTCT, birth weight. | Increase in birth weight and a reduction of the number of anemic children. No effect on MTCT. | Vit. An administered to the mother increases birth weight and prevents anemia. No effect on MTCT |
| Semba 2005 [ | Uganda, 181 ART naïve children. | Vit. A (60 mg) every three months for 18 months. | Mortality, CD4 count, HIV viral load. | Reduction in mortality. No effect on CD4 count or viral load. | Vit. A reduces mortality among children. |
MTCT = mother to child transmission