| Literature DB >> 22497849 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spirulina platensis, a cynobacterium used frequently as a dietary supplement had been found to exhibit many immune-stimulating and antiviral activities. It had been found to activate macrophages, NK cells, T cells, B cells, and to stimulate the production of Interferon gamma (IFN-γ) and other cytokines. Natural substances isolated from Spirulina platensis had been found to be potent inhibitors against several enveloped viruses by blocking viral absorption/penetration and some replication stages of progeny viruses after penetration into cells. We aimed to study whether this dietary supplement possesses any therapeutically feasible activity worthy of further larger controlled clinical evaluation.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22497849 PMCID: PMC3353193 DOI: 10.1186/1471-230X-12-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Figure 1Flowchart of patients.
Baseline characteristics of analyzed patients
| Characteristic | Spirulina treated Group (n = 30) | Silymarin treated group (n = 29) |
|---|---|---|
| Age-yr (mean ± SD) | 47 ± 12 | 48 ± 12 |
| Sex - M/F | 21/9 | 18/11 |
| Body mass index | 29.8 ± 6.2 | 29.7 ± 6.8 |
| Baseline HCV RNA (log10 IU/mL): median (Q1-Q3) | 5.35 (4.84-6.07) | 5.43 (4.94-6.02) |
| Baseline ALT: median (Q1-Q3) | 76 (44-106) | 75 (43-108) |
| Baseline Child-Pugh score: mean(SD) | 7.067 (1.28) | 7 (1.25) |
| Interferon history: | 23/3/4 | 20/3/6 |
End of treatment and early virological response in both groups
| Treatment group | End of Treatment Response (6 months) | Total | Sig | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spirulina | Count | 24 | 2 | 4 | 30 | 0.12 |
| % within Treatment group | 80% | 6.7% | 13.3% | 100% | ||
| Silymarin | Count | 28 | 0 | 1 | 29 | |
| % within Treatment group | 96.6% | 0% | 3.4% | 100% | ||
| Spirulina | Count | 27 | 2 | 1 | 30 | 0.22 |
| % within Treatment group | 90% | 6.7% | 3.3% | 100% | ||
| Silymarin | Count | 29 | 0 | 0 | 29 | |
| % within Treatment group | 100% | 0% | 0% | 100% | ||
Figure 2Boxplot graph representation of log transformed virus load (Log PCR) in each treatment group.
Relation of ETR to baseline virus load
| Treatment group | Baseline viremia | ETR | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| non-ETR | p-ETR | c-ETR | ||||
| Low viremia ≤ 100000 | Count | |||||
| % within viremia | ||||||
| Intermediate viremia | Count | |||||
| % within viremia | ||||||
| High viremia > 2 millions | Count | |||||
| % within viremia | ||||||
| Total | Count | |||||
| % within viremia | ||||||
Mean CLDQ and ASEX scores in both groups
| Treatment | Compared Pairs | Number | Variable name | Mean | SD | Paired t | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pair 1 | 30 | CLDQ before Rx | 4.730 | 0.320 | 6.884 | 0.0000 | |
| 30 | CLDQ after 6 months | 4.301 | 0.442 | ||||
| Pair 2 | 30 | ASEX before Rx | 17.333 | 4.452 | 5.323 | 0.00001 | |
| 30 | ASEX after 6 months | 15.167 | 2.995 | ||||
| Pair 1 | 29 | CLDQ before Rx | 4.727 | 0.354 | 2.416 | 0.0225 | |
| 29 | CLDQ after 6 months | 4.586 | 0.395 | ||||
| Pair 2 | 29 | ASEX before Rx | 17.241 | 4.265 | 2.306 | 0.0287 | |
| 29 | ASEX after 6 months | 16.621 | 3.959 | ||||
Figure 3Error-Bar graph depicting the mean ± (CI) difference from baseline in both CLDQ and ASEX scores after 6 months in each treatment group.
Univariate Analysis of Covariance Tests of Between-Subjects Effects
| Source | Dependent Variable | F | Partial Eta | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corrected Model | CLDQ difference from baseline | 5.968 | .001 | .246 |
| ASEX difference from baseline | 7.523 | .000 | .291 | |
| Baseline Child-Pugh score | CLDQ difference from baseline | .033 | .856 | .001 |
| ASEX difference from baseline | 8.314 | .006 | .131 | |
| Baseline virus load | CLDQ difference from baseline | 3.880 | .054 | .066 |
| ASEX difference from baseline | .000 | .997 | .000 | |
| Treatment group | CLDQ difference from baseline | 13.974 | .000 | .203 |
| ASEX difference from baseline | 10.152 | .002 | .156 | |