Star Scientific, Inc. STSI announced today the preliminary results of the Company's ASAP (Anatabloc
Supplementation Autoimmune Prevention) Human Thyroid Study that analyzes the
impact of anatabine dietary supplementation on thyroid health.
(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120301/NE62741LOGO )
The study is a three-month, five-visit, double-blind, placebo-controlled study
of the impact of anatabine dietary supplementation in humans with autoimmune
disease of the thyroid. The study was conducted at nine sites and builds upon
previous epidemiological and animal experimental studies. Initial results for
all study subjects suggest that dietary supplementation with anatabine
ameliorates the immune system's targeting of the thyroid gland in autoimmune
thyroiditis.
Subjects in the study were screened initially to establish the presence of
active autoimmune thyroid inflammation. Baseline thyroid sonography, thyroid
antibody levels, and cytokine levels were collected from the subjects who were
determined to have active autoimmune thyroid inflammation. Thyroid function
tests and routine safety monitoring were also done in these subjects.
Eligible subjects were enrolled in the study and then received
weight-appropriate doses of anatabine or placebo, ranging from nine to
twenty-four mg of the anatabine supplement or placebo per day. Subjects
received treatment for three months, returning at four-week intervals for
repeat laboratory testing and/or sonography of the thyroid.
One-hundred forty-eight subjects completed the study, of which one-hundred
forty six complied with all treatment, visits and required tests. The
preliminary examination of the primary outcomes shows a clear and
statistically significant difference in the treated group as compared to the
placebo group by the end of the trial, with declines in anti-thyroglobulin
antibody levels. Anatabine subjects also tended toward a reduction in thyroid
gland vascularity on ultrasound relative to placebo.
The full report of the study is still being completed and will soon be
submitted for peer review. Therefore, it is unavailable at this time.
However, these promising initial results prompted Curtis Wright, MD, MPH,
Medical Director of Rock Creek Pharmaceuticals, to comment, "It is remarkable
that dietary supplementation is able to help lower the thyroid antibody
activity. To see antibodies that may have been elevated for years beginning
to come down in a significant way after three months of supplementation is
exciting. Given the rate of decline over three months, it is quite reasonable
to expect that the effect may continue with longer use, which has already been
observed in individual cases. I look forward to following subjects over a
longer period in order to establish how profound and clinically meaningful the
effect is going to be. The thyroglobulin levels in some patients returned
entirely to normal in this three month study."
Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Loading...
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.
Join Now: Free!
Already a member?Sign in