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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03216811

Nutraceutical in Cardiovascular Primary Prevention

Nutraceutical Compound to Optimize Cholesterol, Endothelial and Inflammatory Parameters in Subjects With Hypercholesterolemia and Low to Moderate Cardiovascular Risk: the NIRVANA Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
52 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital of Ferrara · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Nutraceuticals have attracted interest as possible approach to be associated with lifestyle changes for lowering plasma cholesterol levels in patients with moderate hypercholesterolemia. Ruscica and colleagues showed that a 8-weeks treatment with a nutraceutical combination containing red yeast rice extract, berberine, policosanol, astaxanthin, coenzyme Q10, and folic acid was able to reduce significantly total cholesterol (-12.8%) and low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (-21.1%) \[11\]. These nutraceutical compounds exert their lipid-lowering effect through different ways, like the inhibition of the hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A (CoA) enzyme, increasing the hepatic expression of low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor and the LDL degradation via enhanced hepatic binding and internalization. In addition, they up regulate the numbers and function of circulating endothelial progenitor cells increasing nitric oxide (NO) production. The purpose of the present study was to assess the effectiveness of CARDIOVIS COLESTEROLO 3 mg (containing red rice fermented with Monascus purpureus titrated with 3% monacolin K, hydrol mixture of olive fruit titrated with vitamin E, Coenzyme Q10 and polymethoxyflavones) in terms of cholesterol, endothelial and inflammatory parameters reduction.

Detailed description

Epidemiology. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the most common cause of death globally: an estimated 17.5 million people died from CVD in 2012, representing 31% of all global deaths. Of these deaths, an estimated 7.4 million were due to coronary heart disease and 6.7 million were due to stroke. Consistent evidences suggest that a large proportion of CVD incidence could be prevented by lifestyle modifications. Atherosclerosis, hypercholesterolemia, inflammation and endothelial dysfunction Atherosclerosis covers a central rule in cardiovascular diseases. This process can be promoting by several risk factors, all related with endothelial dysfunction, as hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, cigarette smoking and arterial hypertension that acting as negative stimuli lead to a prothrombotic pathway by proinflammatory-induced cytokines and chemokine's production. Furthermore endothelial cells exposed to hypercholesterolemia are inhibited by the downregulation of extracellular nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) in the release of endothelium-derived relaxing factor, thus the benefits of lowering cholesterol are not only related to its primary implication in the atherosclerosis process, but also by the improvement of the endothelial function. Cardiovascular risk (systematic coronary risk evaluation, SCORE). Current guidelines recommend the cardiovascular risk estimation, using a risk estimation system such as SCORE, for adults \>40 years of age, unless they are automatically categorized as being at high-risk or very high-risk based on documented cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus, or kidney disease. A patient is defined at low to moderate risk when the cardiovascular risk is below 5%. Interventional strategies for hypercholesterolemia. The current guidelines recommendations for the management of hypercholesterolemia according cardiovascular risk are reported below in the Table. In addition to lifestyle advice, drugs may be considered in patients at low risk if LDL values are ≥ 190 mg/dl and in patients at moderate risk if LDL values are ≥ 100 mg/dl. Nutraceuticals Several studies have assessed the effect of dietary interventions on risk factors for CVDs, but there is often lack effectiveness in the long term, mainly due to poor compliance. Research has thus turned its attention to nutraceuticals, nutrients that have the ability to modulate physiological and pathophysiological molecular mechanisms, resulting in favorable health outcomes. Nutraceuticals enhance cardiovascular health through several metabolic pathways as via promoting vasodilatory, anti-atherogenic, antioxidant, antithrombotic and anti-inflammatory effects\]. Of note the extracts of red yeast rice explicate a lowering lipid action through monacolins, a family of naturally occurring statins, especially monacolin K, that is an inhibitor of the hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA enzyme. Several trials of its possible lipid-lowering effects have been conducted and a meta-analysis \[10\] assesses the effectiveness and safety of preparations on lipid modification. Nutraceuticals have attracted interest as possible approach to be associated with lifestyle changes for lowering plasma cholesterol levels in patients with moderate hypercholesterolemia. Ruscica and colleagues showed that a 8-weeks treatment with a nutraceutical combination containing red yeast rice extract, berberine, policosanol, astaxanthin, coenzyme Q10, and folic acid was able to reduce significantly total cholesterol (-12.8%) and low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (-21.1%). These nutraceutical compounds exert their lipid-lowering effect through different ways, like the inhibition of the hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA enzyme, increasing the hepatic expression of LDL receptor and the LDL degradation via enhanced hepatic binding and internalization. In addition, they up regulate the numbers and function of circulating endothelial progenitor cells increasing NO production. The purpose of the present study was to assess the effectiveness of CARDIOVIS COLESTEROLO 3 mg (containing red rice fermented with Monascus purpureus titrated with 3% monacolin K, hydrol mixture of olive fruit titrated with vitamin E, Coenzyme Q10 and polymethoxyflavones) in terms of cholesterol, endothelial and inflammatory parameters reduction. This is a prospective, single-center, and phase IIb study evaluating the effectiveness of CARDIOVIS COLESTEROLO 3 MG in improving cholesterol, endothelial and inflammatory parameters. Subjects that meet the inclusion criteria and have provided informed consent will be assigned to receive a daily oral dose of CARDIOVIS COLESTEROLO 3 mg. Before the treatment with CARDIOVIS COLESTEROLO 3 mg all subjects undergo a 4-week period of lifestyle advice and changes. If, after the 4 weeks, LDL values are confirmed above the established cutoffs, the subjects receive CARDIOVIS COLESTEROLO 3 mg. Finally, a last blood samples to assess a potential rebound effect after nutraceutical suspension is collected 4 weeks after the treatment stop.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGnutraceutical8-week administration of nutraceutical compound

Timeline

Start date
2017-07-20
Primary completion
2017-10-31
Completion
2017-12-02
First posted
2017-07-13
Last updated
2017-12-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03216811. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Nutraceutical in Cardiovascular Primary Prevention (NCT03216811) · Clinical Trials Directory