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Nutrition, Vitamins & Supplements for Seniors
Safety, Effectiveness of Dietary Supplements Focus
of Major Conference
$4 billion a year spent on herbal products for
better health, memory, sex
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Flash video about botanicals
featuring David Pasco, who has studied many medicinal plants.
Click to video. |
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April 25, 2007 Senior citizens, probably the most
ardent seekers of better health, are among the Americans that consume
more than $4 billion worth of St. Johns wort, echinacea, Ginkgo biloba
and other herbal products each year in hopes of improving their health,
memory and even their sex lives. A major conference opens next week at
the University of Mississippi to explore the latest studies on the
safety and quality of botanical dietary supplements.
The 6th Oxford International Conference on the
Science of Botanicals brings together nearly 150 scientists, regulatory
officials and industry representatives from around the world to discuss
the latest studies.
Hosted by the National Center for Natural Products
Research, a unit of the University of Mississippi School of Pharmacy, in
conjunction with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Center for Food
Safety and Applied Nutrition and groups in China and India, the annual
gathering is recognized as one of the nations most important scientific
forums on the herbal products industry.
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Nutrition, Vitamins & Supplements |
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The NCNPR has set a priority for researchers of
establishing global quality and safety standards for materials used in
the multibillion-dollar herbal industry.
In this country, herbal products, or dietary
supplements, are "not as tightly regulated as prescription drugs, so
there is less assurance regarding their safety and their quality," said
NCNPR Director Larry Walker.
Supplements are regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. If the
FDA decides a product is mislabeled, adulterated or a health hazard, the
agency can remove it from the market. But such violations are difficult
to catch without industry standards and scientific methods to undergird
research supporting these regulatory decisions.
Hammering home that point, Walker asks: "How do you
determine that labels are accurate? Is a certain chemical constituent in
a supplement a normal one or a contaminant? What methods are available
to test these? If a natural constituent is thought to be harmful, how do
you confirm it? If a certain constituent is harmful, what limits should
be set for it?"
Answers to many of these questions require
"developing new research methods, identifying new constituents in
herbal products or isolating them in pure form so they can be more
rigorously studied," Walker said. "That is where our work comes in."
For the past six years, NCNPR scientists have been
testing, analyzing and authenticating botanical dietary supplements
under a cooperative agreement with the FDA Center for Food Safety and
Applied Nutrition.
"We are interested in research aimed at ensuring
the quality and safety of supplements, and providing that information to
the FDA, the botanical supplement community and the public," Walker
said. "Other aspects of our work include basic research on natural
products from many different sources - including plants, microbes and
ocean life - and on translating our findings to pharmaceutical,
agricultural or other applications."
Part of the center's work involves collecting,
verifying and characterizing medicinal plants and extracts from them.
Nearly 1,000 species have grown in the center's medicinal plant garden,
which exchanges material and collaborates with more than 40 institutes
worldwide.
"The university has earned its reputation for
having one of the largest and best medicinal plant collections in the
United States," said Aruna Weerasooriya, a plant taxonomist who manages
the medicinal plant garden.
Obtaining plants or their seeds is a continual
process, requiring international travel and transport. "There have been
times when getting a species through customs was a problem,"
Weerasooriya said. "A few plants have perished en route to Mississippi."
Correct identification of each species is a
critical first step to all other studies, such as determining which
chemical compounds are responsible for a particular species' beneficial
effects, how to grow it to optimize production of these compounds, and
what the standards for purity and strength should be when the herbal
product is sold to consumers. Some species - such as the fever-breaking
Eupatorium perfoliatum L., commonly known as boneset - have been studied
for introduction to Mississippi farmers as possible cash crops.
"We study their biology, best propagation and
cultivation methods, seasonal chemical variations, and best harvesting
and post-harvesting processes," Weerasooriya said. "After harvesting,
plants are air-dried to preserve their chemical properties." Dried
plants are ground into powder that NCNPR researchers extract and use in
their studies.
Six years ago, David Pasco, a cellular and
molecular biologist, and Ikhlas Khan, a pharmacognocist and director of
NCNPR's FDA Program, discovered significant variations in products
containing Echinacea, which are marketed as immune system boosters.
Three species of the herb - E. angustifolia, E. purpurea and E. pallida
- are used in the commercial preparations.
The amount of active compounds in those
preparations can vary, depending upon which of the three species and
which parts of the plants - leaves, stems or both - are used in the
products. That's because each species and each part of the plant may
contain different amounts of active compounds.
"From plant materials collected from 10 different
sources around the country, we found up to a hundred fold difference in
the materials' activities," Pasco said. "Differences in these materials,
of course, imply the finished products would reflect the same
variations."
It's variations like these that worry scientists,
who hold strongly to the notion that research results must be replicated
to be believed.
"If we don't use the same species or same plant
materials in our studies, our research can never be repeated. And if we
don't have standard materials for clinical trials, how can we determine
if [a product or compound] has an efficacy? You really can't, which
poses a big problem for researchers and consumers," Pasco said.
"Standards are extremely important."
So, too, are the center's studies aimed at
determining how ingredients in dietary supplements might cause harm to
cells or organs in the body.
"Some problems with the safety of dietary
supplements can stem from the inadvertent use of the wrong plant
species in their products," said center biochemist Shabana Khan.
Other problems can arise when contaminated plant
materials are used. Some samples of ginseng, for example, contain
fungicides and heavy metals such as lead, nickel and cadmium - which can
be bad news for consumers if not monitored and limited. Other herbal
products have been found to contain pollen, weeds and other biological
contaminants.
So, in addition to screening botanicals for
contaminants, NCNPR staff evaluate some botanicals for potential
toxicity. Most of the work is done in vitro (in the test tube) using
different human cell types cultured in the center's laboratories.
To determine whether a supplement causes, say,
liver or kidney damage, extracts are dropped onto cultures containing
human liver or human kidney cells, and cell damage or death is measured.
After purification of the extracts, the process is repeated to focus on
which compound in the extract kills the cells.
Efficacy, just how well a dietary supplement
delivers the health benefits it's claimed to provide, "is not really a
major issue for dietary supplements from a regulatory perspective,"
Walker said. That's because it's illegal to label, advertise or market
supplements as disease treatments or preventatives.
"Under the law, these are 'drug' claims, and it's
illegal for any supplement manufacturer to make these claims on its
labels," Walker said.
Manufacturers may make some "structure-function"
claims, such as "promotes healthy bones and joints" or "maintains a
healthy immune system," he said. "But generally, the FDA's center
regulating botanical supplements does not deal with how well supplements
may work. Rather, they take seriously and as a top priority their safety
mission - to first protect the public from potential harm, while not
unduly restricting access to the supplements that are available
according to law."
That doesn't mean NCNPR researchers don't have a
stable of workhorse assays to determine the biological activity, or
efficacy, of botanical compounds. They do, but they use the assays to
find botanicals with potential to improve human health and to find leads
to promising new medicines as part of their thriving drug discovery and
development program.
They also determine how effectively botanical
compounds are absorbed into the body by measuring how quickly they pass
through cell membranes or single-cell layers in cultures with human
intestinal cells.
"We can determine if a pure botanical extract would
work better in the human body than when it has been compounded with
other elements found in supplements," Shabana Khan said. In the lab,
they can also study how supplements interact with other drugs taken at
the same time by determining their interaction with drug-metabolizing
enzymes.
"This work is important to the health of our
citizens," said UM Pharmacy Dean Barbara Wells. "We're providing the
scientific underpinnings that allow development of standards and greater
knowledge about how dietary supplements can be evaluated."
The center's work and that of others is paying off.
"Many quality manufacturers and distributors
understand the importance of this work and are taking it upon themselves
to develop standards, even in cases where it may not be compulsory,"
Walker said. "And the industry as a whole, via trade associations and
the like, is trying to elevate the general quality and safety of herbal
products."
The FDA chose to partner with NCNPR in this effort
because the center is renowned for its work with biologically active
plant materials.
"For more than a decade, the center has been an
international leader in understanding the chemistry and biology of
medicinal plants and their impact on human health," said UM chief
research officer Alice Clark.
>> The conference home page provides a slide show
of medicinal plants, print stories, video packages, photographs of key
researchers and links to their biographical sketches, as well as links
to the FDA, National Institutes of Health and other groups. Click this
link
http://www.olemiss.edu/news2/botanicals/index.html
For more information about the center and the FDA
partnership on botanicals, go to
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/pharmacy/ncnpr.
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