| Literature DB >> 30778086 |
Faisal Abuabat1, Abdulaziz AlAlwan1, Emad Masuadi2, Mohammad Hassan Murad3, Hamdan Al Jahdali4, Mazen Saleh Ferwana5.
Abstract
Asthma is a chronic lung disease characterized by airway inflammation and hyper-responsiveness of airway smooth muscles. There is growing evidence that magnesium may have a role in managing asthma through its dual effect as an anti-inflammatory and bronchodilating agent. To assess the efficacy of oral magnesium supplements in chronic asthmatic patients. In addition to searching through Clinicaltrials.gov/ and references for oral magnesium supplement studies, we performed a database search in Medline, CINAHL, CENTRAL, and Embase. We contacted the authors of the included trials to ask for additional information. We included randomized controlled trials that compared oral magnesium supplements versus placebo, in addition to standard asthma treatment in mild-moderate asthmatic adults and children (older than 6 years). Two reviewers independently performed the study selection, data abstraction, and the assessment of the risk of bias. Eight trials at moderate risk of bias enrolling a total of 917 patients were included. Oral magnesium improved FEV1 at week 8 (5.69 (L/min); 95% CI: 1.92, 9.46; I2: 45%). There was no significant improvement in FEV1 at other follow up periods. There was no significant change in FVC, Methacholine challenge test, the frequency of bronchodilator use, or symptoms score. There were no data on mortality or quality of life. Oral magnesium supplements may lead to improvement in FEV1 that was only demonstrated at eight weeks; but no effect on any other outcome. Until future evidence emerges, oral magnesium cannot be recommended as adjuvants to standard treatment for mild to moderate asthmatic individuals.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30778086 PMCID: PMC6379356 DOI: 10.1038/s41533-019-0116-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Fig. 1PRISMA study selection flowchart
Evidence table: study description and characteristics
| S. no | Setting | Study type | Age/gender | Duration | Intervention group | Control group | Outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample size, | Intervention and dose | Sample size, | ||||||
| 1. Bede et al.[ | Outpatient setting, Hungary | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Children aged 4–16 years. 24 boys and 16 girls (17 M/7F) in the intervention group (11 M/5F) in the placebo group | 4-weeks run-in period. 12-week treatment period. | 24 children received the intervention | 16 children, children < 7 years old received 200 mg, and children > 7 years old received 290 mg Mg-citrate daily | 16 children received 260 mg glucose placebo tablets | Changes in FEV1, bronchodilators dose and daytime symptoms scores were recorded on a personal diary card. |
| 2. Bede et al.[ | Outpatient setting, Hungary | Randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled trial | Aged 4–16 years. 62 boys and 27 girls. (40 M/14F) in the intervention group, and (22 M/13F) in the placebo group | 4-week run-in period, 12-week treatment period | 54 patients received the intervention. | Children < 7 years old received 200 mg, and children > 7 years old received 290 mg Mg-citrate daily | 35 patients received 260 mg glucose as a placebo | The number of bronchodilator doses and daytime activity and symptoms, night-time awakenings, scores were recorded each day on a personal diary card, measurement of FEV1 at each visit was chosen to follow up progression |
| 3. Fogarty et al.[ | 24 primary care practices, Nottingham UK | Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind parallel-group trial | Aged 18–60 years. 112 males and 205 females (33 M/66F) in the Mg intervention group (42 M/64F) in the placebo group | 3-week run-in period, 16-week treatment period | 99 patients | Magnesium amino-chelate 450 mg/day (27.6 mmol) plus vitamin C placebo | 106 patients double-matched placebo | Primary outcome measure was change between weeks 0 and 16 in a single summary statistic, which combined categorical changes in all of the below measures, with equal weight given to each outcome (−1 for worse, 0 for same and +1 for better asthma control) |
| 4. Fogarty et al.[ | 24 primary care practices, Nottingham UK | Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind parallel-group trial | Aged 18–60 years. 40 males and 52 females (8 M/31F) in the Mg intervention group (18 M/14F) in the placebo group | 10 weeks | 31 patients | Magnesium amino-chelate 450 mg/day (27.6 mmol) plus vitamin C placebo | 32 patients double-matched placebo | Decrease in individual inhaled corticosteroid dose achieved in each active supplement group relative to placebo |
| 5. Kazaks et al.[ | Outpatient setting, USA | Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind parallel-group trial | 16 males and 36 females, (7M/18F) in the intervention group (9M/18F) in the placebo group | 6.5 months | 28 patients | 340 Mg-citrate daily | 27 patients placebo. (two patients were lost to follow up) | Primary outcome: change in bronchial responsiveness as measured by a positive methacholine challenge test in which methacholine provoked a 20% decrease in FEV1 from baseline |
| 6. Gontijo-Amaral et al.[ | Outpatient setting, division of pulmonology, allergy and immunology, Brazil | A double-blind randomized parallel placebo-controlled study | Aged 7–19 years. 19 males and 18 females (12 M/6F) received the intervention (7 M/12F), received the placebo | 2 months | 18 patients | 300 mg magnesium-glycine daily | 19 patients received glycine as placebo | Primary outcome: bronchial reactivity evaluated with methacholine challenge test (PC20) |
| 7. Fathi et al.[ | Outpatient setting, Allergy & pulmonology department, Iran | Double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial | Asthmatics 19–55 years of age. 53 males and 47 females (25 M/25F) received the intervention, (28 M/22F) the placebo | 2 months | 50 patients | 340 mg of Mg-citrate | 50 patients | FEV1, FVC and FEV1/FVC ratio |
| 8. Petrov et al.[ | Outpatient setting, MOH, Russia | Open-labeled comparative randomized parallel-group study | Asthmatic children, aged 6–18 years. 36 males and 14 females (17 M/8F) received the intervention, (19 M/6F) were in the control group | 24 weeks | 25 patients | Magnesium B6 forte (Sanofi-Aventis, France) orally at a dose of 20 mg/kg/day | 25 patients | Daytime symptoms, night-time symptoms, bronchodilator use and number of asymptomatic days |
Fig. 2a FCV comparison of Mg supplements vs. placebo, b FEV1 comparison of Mg supplements vs. placebo, c bronchodilator use comparison of Mg supplements vs. placebo