| Literature DB >> 35173682 |
Francisco Blanco-Vaca1,2,3, Noemi Rotllan3,4, Marina Canyelles3,4, Didac Mauricio3,4,5, Joan Carles Escolà-Gil3,4, Josep Julve3,4.
Abstract
Depleted nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is a common hallmark of metabolic disorders. Therefore, NAD+-increasing strategies have evolved as a potential therapeutic venue to combat cardiometabolic diseases. Several forms of vitamin B3, i.e., nicotinamide and nicotinamide mononucleotide, and especially nicotinamide riboside, have attracted most interest as potentially safe and efficacious candidates for NAD+ restoration. Herein, we dissected the characteristics of the latest clinical trials testing the therapeutic potential of different vitamin B3 molecules to improve cardiometabolic health, with a special focus on randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials performed in the context of obesity or other pathologies, mainly linked to cardiovascular system and skeletal muscle functionality. The favorable outcomes via NAD+-increasing strategies found in the different studies were quite heterogeneous. NAD+-increasing interventions improved capacity to exercise, decreased blood pressure, increased the anti-inflammatory profile and insulin-stimulated glucose disposal, and reduced the fat-free mass. Except for the decreased blood pressure, the significant results did not include many hard clinical end points, such as decreases in weight, BMI, fasting glucose, or HbA1c percentage. However, the analyzed trials were short-term interventions. Overall, the accumulated clinical data can be interpreted as moderately promising. Additional and long-term studies will be needed to directly compare the doses and duration of treatments among different vitamin B3 regimes, as well as to define the type of patients, if any, that could benefit from these treatments. In this context, a major point of advancement in delineating future clinical trials would be to identify subjects with a recognized NAD+ deficiency using novel, appropriate biomarkers. Also, confirmation of gender-specific effect of NAD+-increasing treatments would be needed.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trials; diabetes mellitus; nicotinamide; obesity; vitamin B3
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35173682 PMCID: PMC8842632 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.815565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Recently (from 2018) published randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials that tested NMN administration on healthy individuals or in individuals with overweight and obesity.
| Country, NCT code | Dose, duration of treatment, number, and main clinical characteristics | Main results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| China | NMN or placebos (300, 600, and 1,200 mg) were administered during 6 weeks to 48 subjects (8 women), aged 27–50. The recreational runners, training 5–6 times a week, were divided into four groups. | No major adverse effects. Evidence of increased plasma metabolites. Medium and high doses presented increased exercise capacity (i.e., increased oxygen uptake). No effect on cardiac function, BMI, or fat-free mass. | ( |
| 2000035138 | |||
| USA | NMN or placebo per day (250 mg) over 10 weeks, given to 25 women with mean age of 61, BMI of 33.5 kg/m2, plasma glucose of 5.65 mmol/L, and HbA1c of 5.55%, | No major adverse effects. Increased insulin-stimulated glucose disposal and skeletal muscle insulin signaling. Up-regulated expression of platelet-derived growth factor receptor β and other genes related to muscle remodeling. No change in body weight or composition. | ( |
| 03151239 |
BMI, body mass index; NMN, nicotinamide mononucleotide; NCT, clinical trial identifier (ClinicalTrials.gov).
Recently (from 2018) published randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials that tested NR administration on individuals either healthy, aged, or overweight or obese.
| Country, NCT code | Dose, duration of treatment, number, and main clinical characteristics | Main results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| USA, 02921659 | Administered 1,000 mg per day, 6 weeks in a crossover design, | No major adverse effects. Increased NAD+ and related metabolites in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Treatment decreased blood pressure, aortic pulse wave velocity, and carotid compliance. No change in total energy intake and expenditure, BMI, % body fat, glucose and insulin metabolism, or exercise capacity. | ( |
| USA | Administered 100 mg, 300 mg, 1,000 mg per day, 8 weeks parallel study, 133 (85 women); 40–60 years old, healthy overweight (BMI 25–30 kg/m2) in a parallel study. | No major adverse effects. Dose-dependent increase of NAD+ whole blood and urine metabolome. No changes in blood pressure, mean heart rate, weight, or resting energy expenditure. | ( |
| 0271593 | |||
| UK, USA, Australia | Single center, double blind, placebo-controlled, and crossover study on 12 male aged volunteers, recruited from the Birmingham 1,000 Elders group ( | Muscle RNA sequencing revealed that NR down-regulated energy metabolism and mitochondria pathways without altering mitochondrial bioenergetics or whole-body glucose homeostasis, decreasing circulatory cytokines (especially IL-6, IL-5 and IL-2). NR did not alter hand-grip strength. | ( |
| 02950441 | |||
| Denmark, 2303483 | 2,000 mg per day, 12 weeks: 40 men, 40–70-year-old, insulin resistant, with mean BMI of 38.5 kg/m2, glucose of 5.6 mmol/L and HbA1c of 5.7%. | No major adverse effects. No changes in carbohydrate metabolism, resting energy expenditure, lipolysis, lipid oxidation, or body composition. No impact on glucose tolerance, β-cell secretory capacity, α-cell function or incretin secretion, or bile acid levels. Moreover, there were no changes in NAD+ metabolite concentration in skeletal muscle. | ( |
| Netherlands | 1,000 mg per day, 6 weeks, 13 (7 women), age 59 ± 5, healthy overweight or obese (BMI 30.2 ± 2.6 kg/m2) | No major adverse effects. Increased markers of NAD+ synthesis in skeletal muscle. Minor increase in fat free mass, especially in women (6 out of 7). Minor increase in sleeping metabolic rate that could be related to the change in fat free mass. Acetylcarnitine concentrations in skeletal muscle and the capacity to form acetylcarnitine upon exercise were increased in NR in respect to placebo. No effects of NR were found on insulin sensitivity, mitochondrial function, hepatic and intramyocellular lipid accumulation, cardiac energy status, cardiac ejection fraction, ambulatory blood pressure, plasma markers of inflammation, or energy metabolism. | ( |
| 02835664 |
BMI, body mass index; NAD, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; NR, nicotinamide riboside; NCT, clinical trial identifier (ClinicalTrials.gov).