| Literature DB >> 26576073 |
Francesca Algieri1, Alba Rodriguez-Nogales1, M Elena Rodriguez-Cabezas1, Severiano Risco1, M Angeles Ocete1, Julio Galvez1.
Abstract
Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are the two most common categories of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which are characterized by chronic inflammation of the intestine that comprises the patients' life quality and requires sustained pharmacological and surgical treatments. Since their aetiology is not completely understood, nonfully efficient drugs have been developed and those that show effectiveness are not devoid of quite important adverse effects that impair their long-term use. Therefore, many patients try with some botanical drugs, which are safe and efficient after many years of use. However, it is necessary to properly evaluate these therapies to consider a new strategy for human IBD. In this report we have reviewed the main botanical drugs that have been assessed in clinical trials in human IBD and the mechanisms and the active compounds proposed for their beneficial effects.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26576073 PMCID: PMC4630406 DOI: 10.1155/2015/179616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Figure 1Physiopathology of IBD. (a) The intestine is the largest mucosal surface exposed to the external environment. It constitutes an interface between the host and the luminal contents, which include nutrients and the highest count of resident microbes. Thus, the intestinal immune system meets more antigens than any other part of the body and it must discriminate between invasive organisms and harmless antigens, such as food, proteins, and commensal bacteria, to prevent infections or preserve the homeostasis. This intestinal homeostasis depends on the dynamic interaction between the microbiota, the intestinal epithelial cells, and the resident immune cells, which coordinate a response that keeps the balance between immunity and tolerance. (b) A breakdown of this balance triggers the chronic inflammatory process that characterizes inflammatory bowel disease. There are often several preexisting conditions that lead to the disease: first of all, a genetic susceptibility of the intestinal immune system to distinguish an environmental antigen presented within the gastrointestinal tract; secondly, the contact with the antigen; finally, usually due to an alteration of the permeability, the antigen is presented to the gastrointestinal mucosal immune system through its paracellular passage, which triggers the inflammatory cascade. During early inflammation, luminal antigens activate the different innate immune cells located in the intestine, including natural killer cells, mast cells, neutrophils, macrophages, and dendritic cells, and maintained inflammatory reaction promotes the activation of the adaptive immune response. Abnormally activated effector CD4+ T helper (Th) cells synthesize and release different inflammatory mediators that generate an amplified inflammation that originates from chronic tissue injury and epithelial damage.
Clinical trials of botanical drugs in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.
| Herbal preparation | Study design | Number of patients | IBD type | Dose | Comparator | Frequency | Endpoint | Reference |
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| Randomized, double-blind controlled study | 44 | UC | 100 mL twice/day | Placebo | 4 weeks |
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| Randomized, double-blind multicentre study | 120 | UC | 1.2 g/day | Mesalazine (4.5 mg/day) | 8 weeks | There were no significant differences between the two treated groups when considering the clinical efficacy rates or the safety profile | [ |
| Randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled study | 224 | UC | 1.2 g/day and 1.8 g/day | Placebo | 8 weeks | Patients treated with the extract, mainly at the highest doses, were more likely to achieve clinical response than those receiving placebo, whereas the incidence of adverse events was similar among groups, although the occurrence of rash was higher in the HMPL-004 extract groups | [ | |
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| Randomized, double-blind multicentre study | 40 | CD | 3 × 500 mg/day | Placebo | 10 weeks | After 8 weeks of treatment with wormwood, there was almost complete remission of symptoms in 65% of the patients, whereas no beneficial effect was observed in those receiving the placebo | [ |
| Randomized, double-blind multicentre study | 20 | CD | 3 × 750 mg/day (in addition to standard therapy) | Standard therapy + placebo | 6 weeks | Wormwood administration promoted the clinical improvement of the symptoms in all the patients. The beneficial effect was associated with a significant decrease in TNF | [ | |
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| — | ? | UC | 750 mg | Sulfasalazine 3 g (3 × 1 g) | 6 weeks | All parameters tested improved after treatment with | [ |
| (Gum resin) | — | 30 | UC? | 900 mg | Sulfasalazine 3 g (3 × 1 g) | 6 weeks | Patients showed an improvement in several parameters: stool properties, histopathology, and scanning electron microscopy, besides haemoglobin, serum iron, calcium, phosphorus, proteins, total leukocytes, and eosinophils. The remission was higher in patients treated with | [ |
| (Boswelan) | Randomized, double-blind, multicentre placebo-controlled study | 82 | CD | 2.4 g/day | Placebo | 12 months | Boswelan showed a safety profile during the long-term therapy but the results obtained did not show a higher efficacy when compared with placebo | [ |
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| Retrospective | 30 | CD | — | — | — | Cannabis administration was associated with an improvement in disease activity and a reduction in the need of other medications, as well as a reduced risk of surgery | [ |
| Prospective | 21 | CD | 2 cigarettes containing 115 mg of THC/day | Placebo | 8 weeks | A significant amelioration of the CD activity index has been reported in the majority of the subjects after cannabis treatment in comparison with placebo administration; in fact, complete remission was achieved in half of the subjects in the cannabis group, whereas it only occurred in 10% of the placebo group patients | [ | |
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| Open-label pilot study | 5 | UC | 1.100 g/day (550 mg × 2) for 1 month, then 1.650 g/day (550 mg × 3) for 1 month and | — | 2 months | The results from this study revealed that the treatment of these patients with curcumin for two months resulted in an overall improvement in all the patients, as evidenced by amelioration of the serological parameters evaluated (erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein) as well as the disease activity index followed, together with a reduction in the dose of medication, or even suppression. In the CD group, all patients also reported fewer bowel movements, less diarrhoea, and less abdominal pain and cramping | [ |
| Randomized, double-blind multicentre placebo-controlled study | 89 | UC | 2 g/day plus sulfasalazine or mesalazine | Placebo plus sulfasalazine or mesalazine | 6 months | The relapse rate was significantly higher in the placebo group, receiving only the aminosalicylate (20.5%), than in the curcumin-treated cohorts (4.7%). During the period of the study, a marked reduction of the disease-associated clinical activity index and the endoscopic index scores was reported | [ | |
Figure 2Chemical structures of Aloe vera compounds.
Figure 3Chemical structures of Andrographis paniculata compounds.
Figure 4Chemical structures of Artemisia absinthium compounds.
Figure 5Chemical structure of boswellic acid.
Figure 6Chemical structures of Cannabis sativa compounds.
Figure 7Chemical structure of curcumin.