| Literature DB >> 30513922 |
Sonia L Ramírez-Garza1,2, Emily P Laveriano-Santos3, María Marhuenda-Muñoz4,5, Carolina E Storniolo6,7, Anna Tresserra-Rimbau8, Anna Vallverdú-Queralt9,10, Rosa M Lamuela-Raventós11,12.
Abstract
The effect of resveratrol (RV) intake has been reviewed in several studies performed in humans with different health status. The purpose of this review is to summarize the results of clinical trials of the last decade, in which RV was determined in biological samples such as human plasma, urine, and feces. The topics covered include RV bioavailability, pharmacokinetics, effects on cardiovascular diseases, cognitive diseases, cancer, type 2 diabetes (T2D), oxidative stress, and inflammation states. The overview of the recent research reveals a clear tendency to identify RV in plasma, showing that its supplementation is safe. Furthermore, RV bioavailability depends on several factors such as dose, associated food matrix, or time of ingestion. Notably, enterohepatic recirculation of RV has been observed, and RV is largely excreted in the urine within the first four hours after consumption. Much of the research on RV in the last 10 years has focused on its effects on pathologies related to oxidative stress, inflammatory biomarkers, T2D, cardiovascular diseases, and neurological diseases.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant; bioavailability; metabolic diseases; obesity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30513922 PMCID: PMC6317057 DOI: 10.3390/nu10121892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Bioavailability and pharmacokinetics. The image summarizes the results of different studies that identified resveratrol (RV) in urine and blood.
Studies of resveratrol bioavailability and pharmacokinetics in the last 10 years *.
| Metabolite | Sample | Type of Study | (n) | Dose | Participants’ Health Status | Effect | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RV and six metabolites: two monosulfates, one disulfate, two monoglucuronides, | Urine and feces | Clinical trial | 40 | After a five-day washout, 10 subjects received a 0.5 g dose, which was escalated sequentially to 1, 2.5, and 5 g | Healthy | An intake of up to one dose of 5 g of RV was safe, with minor adverse events in some cases; 77% of urinary excretion of RV and its metabolites occurred within four hours after the lowest dose. RV underwent enterohepatic recirculation. | [ |
| Plasma | Randomized, crossover, open-label, and single-dose | 24 | Two treatments with a single dose of 400 mg | Healthy | The rate of absorption of | [ | |
| Plasma | Phase I, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, and single-center | 40 | 25, 50, 100, or 150 mg, administered at four hours intervals (six times/day) for 48 h (13 doses in total) | Healthy | High daily doses of | [ | |
| Plasma | Open-label and single-arm | 8 | Healthy | [ | |||
| RV glucuronide and sulfate conjugates, RV glucoside, piceid glucuronides, sulfates, DHR, glucuronide, and sulfate conjugates | Plasma and urine | Randomized and crossover | 10 | After a three-day washout period, three people were chosen for the pilot study in which they consumed 15 grape extract tablets (total RV 4.72 ± 0.07 mg) with 400 mL of water within 10 min. In parallel, seven people were selected randomly to drink 375 mL of red wine (total RV 6.30 ± 0.09 mg) with 400 mL of water consumed within 10 min. | Healthy | Statistically significant differences between grape extract tablets and red wine treatments were obtained for some metabolites, mainly due to the different composition of RV and piceid from both sources. The grape extract tablets delayed RV absorption compared to the red wine treatment. | [ |
| Free RV and conjugated RV (monosulfate, disulfate, and glucoronide) | Plasma | Clinical trial | 15 | Single dose (40 mg) of | Healthy | Bioavailability was higher with soluble formulation compared to dry powder. | [ |
| 24 h urine | Controlled intervention | 12 | Following a washout period, all the subjects received a single oral dose of 0.5 mg | Healthy | The human gut microbiota produced pronounced interindividual differences in | [ | |
| Plasma | Pilot study | 2 | 146 +/− 5.5 mg | Healthy | A mixture of ribose and RV oral transmucosal administration achieved a much higher and quicker RV release compared to the reported traditional free RV capsules. | [ | |
| Free and conjugated RV | Plasma | Randomized and three-way crossover | 15 | Oral doses equivalent to 50 mg or 150 mg of | Healthy | 150 mg dose of | [ |
| Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled | 23 | 250 mg of | Healthy | Piperine co-supplementation with 250 mg of | [ | |
| 24 h urine | Randomized, | 26 | Consumed twice a day (with breakfast and dinner) for 15 days (per each phase) 187 mL of: a control placebo and a functional beverage (4280 g/L of hydroxycinnamic acids, 16 mg/L of anthocyanins, 96 mg/L of flavanols, 83 mg/L of hydroxybenzoic acids, and 5.7 mg/L of stilbenes) | Healthy | The whole profile of the 21 RV metabolites increased after acute and chronic consumption of the functional beverage with respect to the control-placebo beverage and to the baseline. | [ | |
| Phenolic acids including, | 24 h urine | Randomized, placebo-controlled, and crossover | 35 | Six placebo gelatin capsules consumed with 200 mL of water (control) | Healthy | Bioavailability of polyphenols and the excretion of their phenolic metabolites were not significantly affected when polyphenols were consumed in protein-rich soy or dairy drinks. | [ |
| Total RV | Plasma | Randomized and double-blind | 9 | 5 g/day of SRT501 for approximately 14 days | IV colorectal cancer and hepatic metastasis subjects scheduled to undergo hepatectomy. | RV treatment was well tolerated by the patients. The peak plasma after ingestion of SRT501 was 1.942 ng/m, higher than that of an equivalent dose of non-micronized RV supplementation. | [ |
| 24 h urine | Randomized, crossover, and controlled clinical trial | 59 | 15-day run-in period in which they consumed neither grape-derived products nor alcoholic beverages. Afterwards, they consumed every day for four weeks: 272 mL of RW (red wine) with 30 g ethanol/day or 272 mL of DRW (dealcoholized red wine), following the same background diet. | High cardiovascular risk | The whole profile of the 21 RV metabolites increased after RW and DRW consumption, and no differences between them were presented | [ |
cpiceid: cis-3,4′,5-trihydroxystilbene-3-β-d-glucopyranoside, cR3G: cis-RV-3-O-glucuronide, cR3S: cis-RV-3-O-sulfate, cR4G: cis-RV-4′-O-glucuronide, cR4S: cis-RV-4′-O-sulfate, DHR: Dihydroresveratrol, DHR-G1: DHR glucuronide 1, DHR-G2: DHR glucuronide 2, DHR-S1: DHR sulfate 1, DHR-S2: DHR sulfate 2, DHR-SG: DHR sulfoglucuronide, Pic-G: piceid-glucuronide, Pic-S1: Piceid sulfate 1, Pic-S2: Piceid sulfate 2, RV: resveratrol, RV-SG: RV sulfoglucuronide, SRT501: microparticular RV of particle size less than 5um, tpiceid: trans-3,4′,5-trihydroxystilbene-3-β-d-glucopyranoside, tRV: trans-RV, tR3G: trans-RV-3-O-glucuronide, tR3S: trans-RV-3-O-sulfate, tR4G: trans-RV-4′-O-glucuronide, tR4S: trans-RV-4′-O-sulfate, and tR34dS: trans-RV-3,4′-O-disulfate, * Studies which identified resveratrol or some metabolite of resveratrol in plasma, urine, and/or feces.
Figure 2Health effects of resveratrol. A summary of the results of different studies reporting a positive effect of RV on health.
Effects of resveratrol on individuals with different health status reported in the last 10 years *.
| Metabolite | Sample | Type of Study | (n) | Dose | Participants’ Health Status | Effect | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RV 3- | Plasma | Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, and multi-center | 119 | 500 mg/day RV with 500 mg increments every 13 weeks up to 52 weeks, ending with 1000 mg twice daily | Alzheimer | RV was safe and well tolerated, decreased Aβ40 and MMP9 in CSF, modulated neuroinflammation, and induced adaptive immunity. | [ |
| RV, RV-3-glucuronide, | Plasma | Non-randomized, and open-label | 24 | Low-dose RV (1 g daily) or high-dose RV (5 g daily) over a 12-week period | Friedreich ataxia | PBMC frataxin protein levels were not affected. High-dose RV treatment showed a beneficial effect on both oxidative stress and some clinical outcome measures. | [ |
| Total | Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled | 36 | 0, 75, 150, and 300 mg at weekly intervals | T2D | A 75 mg dose of RV correlated with an increase in plasma RV concentration, enhanced the cerebrovascular responsiveness to selected stimuli in T2DM adults. | [ |
| RV and dehydro RV (aglycones and glucuronide conjugates) | Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, and crossover | 17 | 150 mg/day of resVida (RV) for 30 days | T2D | Intrahepatic lipid content correlated negatively with the plasma RV content. RV plasma levels might be affected by metformin treatment; RV did not improve insulin sensitivity. | [ |
| TRM: | Urine | Randomized, parallel-group, multi-center, and controlled clinical trial | 1000 | Exploratory study of the baseline data of PREDIMED study | T2D or at less three major cardiovascular risk factors | Total urinary RV metabolites were directly associated with lower concentrations of fasting blood glucose and triglycerides, and also with lower heart rate. No significant associations were observed between TRM and total cholesterol, HDL, and LDL concentrations, or blood pressure. Therefore, RV may help to decrease cardiovascular risk. | [ |
| Total RV | Plasma | Randomized | 10 | 1, 1.5, and 2 g/day RV, taken in divided doses for four weeks | Overweight or obese and insulin resistant. | Fasting glucose was unchanged, but postprandial glucose and three-hour glucose area under the curve decreased significantly. Insulin sensitivity (using the Matsuda index) improved. Fasting lipid profile, CRP, and adiponectin were unchanged. | [ |
| Total RV | Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled | 20 | 3000 mg/day RV for eight weeks | Overweight or obese with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease | RV did not improve insulin sensitivity, plasma lipids, antioxidant activity, and IGF-1, but it increased ALT and AST, liver enzymes that indicate hepatic stress. | [ |
| Total RV | Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, and crossover | 19 | A single dose of RV (30, 90, and 270 mg) administered at one-week intervals over four weeks | Overweight and obese individuals or postmenopausal women with untreated borderline hypertension | Significant linear relationship between RV dose intake and plasma RV concentration. Higher plasma RV concentration was associated with acute flow-mediated dilatation response. | [ |
| Total conjugated, unconjugated RV, and DHR | Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, and crossover | 11 | 150 mg/day RV for 30 days | Obese | RV supplementation modestly mimicked the beneficial effects of calorie restriction. It reduced sleeping metabolic rate, affected the AMPK–SIRT1–PGC1α axis, decreased hepatic lipid accumulation. and reduced inflammation markers. | [ |
| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate, RV, and DHR | Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, and parallel intervention | 38 | Epigallocatechin-3-gallate + RV 282 and 80 mg/day, | Overweight and obese | The supplementation improved skeletal muscle oxidative capacity, preserved fasting and postprandial fat oxidation, and prevented an increase in triacylglycerol concentrations. | [ |
| Total RV and DHR | Plasma | Randomized, placebo-controlled, and crossover | 45 | 150 mg/day RV capsule for four weeks, with a four-week wash-out period | Overweight and | RV did not have an effect on cardiovascular risk metabolic markers, endothelial function, or inflammation. | [ |
| Total RV and DHR (free and conjugated forms) | Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled | 45 | 75 mg/day (99% pure | Lean and overweight, postmenopausal | RV supplementation did not change plasma substrates and hormones (glucose, plasma lipids, and insulin), adiponectin, leptin, CRP, and IL-6. | [ |
| Total RV, RV glucuronide, and RV sulfate | Plasma | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, and crossover | 22 | 250 and 500 mg | Healthy | RV intake increased total-Hb and deoxy-Hb concentration, variables related to cerebral blood flow. | [ |
| Plasma | Pilot study, randomized, open-label, single-dose, and parallel-group | 10 | Single 5 g dose | Healthy | RV increased TNF-α level 24 h after supplementation, by an average of 3.5 pg/mL, compared with placebo. High levels of sulfo- and glucuronide-conjugated RV compounds. | [ | |
| RV | Plasma | Phase I and randomized | 9 | 1000 mg/day RV for 28 days | Healthy | RV was associated with an increase in the number of circulating γδ T cells and regulatory T cells and higher plasma antioxidant activity. | [ |
| RV-3- | Plasma | Clinical trial | 40 | 0.5, 1.0, 2.5, or 5.0 g/day RV for 29 days | Healthy | Treatment with 2.5 g RV decreased IGF-1 and IGFBP-3 levels in all volunteers; RV might contribute to cancer chemoprevention. | [ |
Aβ40: beta amyloid 40, ALT: alanine aminotransferase, AMPK: adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase, AST: aspartate aminotransferase, CRP: C reactive protein, cR3G: cis-RV-3-O-glucuronide, cR3S: cis-RV-3-O-sulfate, cR4G: cis-RV-4′-O-glucuronide, cR4S: cis-RV-4′-O-sulfate, CSF: cerebrospinal fluid, deoxy-Hb: deoxygenated Hb, DHR: Dihydroresveratrol, Hb: hemoglobin, IGF-1: insulin-like growth factor 1, IGFBP-3: insulin-like growth factor binding protein 3, IL-6: interleukin-6, MMP9: matrix metalloproteinase 9, PBMC: peripheral blood mononuclear cells, PGC1α: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1 alpha, RV: resveratrol, SIRT1: sirtuin 1, T2D: type 2 diabetes, TNF-α: tumour necrosis factor alpha, TRM: total RV metabolites, tR3G: trans-RV-3-O-glucuronide, tR3S: trans-RV-3-O-sulfate, tR4G: trans-RV-4′-O-glucuronide, tR4S: trans-RV-4′-O-sulfate, tRV: trans-RV, and tRDS: trans-RV-disulfate. * Studies which identified resveratrol or some metabolite of resveratrol in plasma, urine, and/or feces.