| Literature DB >> 34066427 |
Mona Abdel-Tawab1,2.
Abstract
Medicinal plants represent a big reservoir for discovering new drugs against all kinds of diseases including inflammation. In spite the large number of promising anti-inflammatory plant extracts and isolated components, research on medicinal plants proves to be very difficult. Based on that background this review aims to provide a summarized insight into the hitherto known pharmacologically active concentrations, bioavailability, and clinical efficacy of boswellic acids, curcumin, quercetin and resveratrol. These examples have in common that the achieved plasma concentrations were found to be often far below the determined IC50 values in vitro. On the other hand demonstrated therapeutic effects suggest a necessity of rethinking our pharmacokinetic understanding. In this light this review discusses the value of plasma levels as pharmacokinetic surrogates in comparison to the more informative value of tissue concentrations. Furthermore the need for new methodological approaches is addressed like the application of combinatorial approaches for identifying and pharmacokinetic investigations of active multi-components. Also the physiological relevance of exemplary in vitro assays and absorption studies in cell-line based models is discussed. All these topics should be ideally considered to avoid inaccurate predictions for the efficacy of herbal components in vivo and to unlock the "black box" of herbal mixtures.Entities:
Keywords: bioavailability; boswellic acids; combinatorial approaches; curcumin; medicinal plant; metabolomics; quercetin; resveratrol; tissue distribution; tissue-plasma-ratio
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066427 PMCID: PMC8148151 DOI: 10.3390/ph14050437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Chemical structures of the most relevant boswellic acids: β-boswellic acid (βBA), α-boswellic acid (αBA), 11-keto-β-boswellic acid (KBA), 3-O-acetyl-β-boswellic acid (AβBA), 3-O-acetyl-α-boswellic acid (AαBA), 3-O-acetyl-11-keto-β-boswellic acid (AKBA).
Overview on the plasma concentrations reported for the individual boswellic acids in pharmacokinetic studies carried out on at least six humans.
| Dosage of | Concentrations of Boswellic Acids in Plasma [µM] | Ref. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KBA | AKBA | βBA | AβBA | αBA | AαBA | ||
| 3 × 4 capsules à 350 mg/day for 1 week ( | 0.01–0.52 | 0–0.03 | 0.19–26.20 | 0.26–12.31 | 0.08–10.59 | 0.14–5.99 | [ |
| 3 × 282 mg/day—fasted state | 0.17 | 0.01 | 0.4 | ND | ND | ND | [ |
| 3 × 282 mg/day—fed state ( | 0.48 | 0.06 | 2.5 | ND in most subjects | 0.69 | 0.24 | |
Values are expressed as range or as mean [range]. ND = not detected.
Overview on the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials addressing the efficacy of frankincense extracts in different diseases associated with inflammation.
| Disease | Study Design | Dosage | Observations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Osteoarthritis knee | Pilot, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled on 48 newly diagnosed or untreated osteoarthritis patients | Self-administration of two tablets à 169.33 mg | ↓ pain and stiffness | [ |
| Osteoarthritis knee | Pilot, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled on 60 patients with mild to moderate osteoarthritis | Aflapin 100 mg per day for 30 days (Aflapin contains | Clinically and statistically significant improvement in pain scores and physical function scores already after 5 days of treatment by ↓ 5-LO and ↓ TNFα | [ |
| Osteoarthritis knee | randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled on 60 patients with mild to moderate symptoms | Aflapin 100 mg per day compared to 100 mg 5-Loxin per day for 90 days | Clinically and statistically significant improvement in pain scores and physical functional scores 7 days after start of treatment | [ |
| Osteoarthritis knee | randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled on 75 patients with mild to moderate symptoms | 100 mg or 250 mg 5-Loxin ( | dose dependant clinically and statistically significant improvement in pain scores and physical functional scores 7 days after start of treatment | [ |
| Osteoarthritis knee | randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled on 30 patients | 3 × 333 mg WokVel™ per day for 8 weeks ( | ↓ knee pain, ↑ knee flexion, | [ |
| Morbus Crohn | randomized double-blind, verum-controlled parallel group on 83 patients | ↓ Crohn’s Disease Activity Index (CDAI) by 90 in the H15 group and by 53 score points after therapy with mesalazine. Difference not statistically significant | [ | |
| Collagenous Colitis | randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multicenter trial on 25 patients | 3 × 400 mg | Proportion of patients in clinical remission was higher in the | [ |
| Bronchial asthma | double-blind, placebo-controlled on 40 patients | 3 × 300 mg | Improvement of disease reflected in disappearance of physical symptoms and different signs as well as decrease in eosinophilic count in 70% of the | [ |
| Brain tumors | Prospective pilot, randomized, placebo-controlled double-blind study on 44 patients | 3 × 4 × H15 (350 mg | reduction >75% of cerebral edema in 60% of the patients receiving | [ |
↓ stands for decrease and ↑ stands for increase.
Figure 2Chemical structures of curcumin, quercetin, and resveratrol.
An excerpt of recent meta-analyses and systematic reviews addressing the efficacy of curcumin in different diseases associated with inflammation.
| Disease | No. of Clinical Trials and Patients Included in the Meta-Analysis/Systematic Review | Formulation | Observations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary knee osteoarthritis | Ten RCTs on 1287 participants | Formulations of turmeric or curcumin extract with increased bioavailability as adjunct or mono-therapy compared to placebo for up to maximal 8 months | ↓ pain and | [ |
| Osteoarthritis knee | 16 RCTs on 1810 participants mostly from Asia | All forms of turmeric extracts compared to placebo or actives e.g., NSAID for up to 12 weeks (one study 16 weeks) | ↓ pain and | [ |
| Ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD) | 6 RCTs on a total of 374 patients with active mild to moderate UC and one RCT on 30 patients with mild to moderate CD | All forms of curcumin formulations compared to placebo for up to 6 months | Promising results. Two studies with low oral doses reported no significant differences and four with higher doses or better bioavailable curcumin reported significant reduction in clinical symptoms and higher remission rates | [ |
↓ stands for decrease and ↑ stands for increase.
Figure 3Overview on the absorption and metabolism of quercetin glycosides in the small intestine according to [80].
Figure 4Simplified excerpt of the relation between different inflammatory mediators visualizing the point of attack of boswellic acids, curcumin, quercetin and resveratrol and the corresponding IC50 values. AA = arachidonic acid, COX-1,-2 = cyclooxygenase-1, -2, ERK 1/2 = extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2, IL-1β = interleukin 1β, JNK1-3 = c-Jun-N-terminal kinase 1-3, 5-LO = 5-lipoxygenase, LT = leukotrienes, MAPK = mitogen activated protein kinase, mPGES-1 = microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1, NF-κB = nuclear factor ‘kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B-cells, PGE2 = prostaglandin E2, PGH2 = prostaglandin H2, TNFα = tumor necrosis factor α.
Figure 5Schematic representation of a competitive dialysis approach making use of plasma-microsomal protein co-incubation according to [123].
Figure 6An exemplary overview on a possible approach for conducting combinatorial medicinal plant research.