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Clinical Trial Summary

Goldenseal is a botanical natural product commonly used to self-treat symptoms of the common cold and many digestive disorders. Goldenseal products typically contain the isoquinoline alkaloids berberine, hydrastine, and hydrastinine. These constituents contain a methylenedioxyphenyl ring, a 'structural alert' that can lead to irreversible inhibition of drug metabolizing enzymes, particularly the cytochromes P450 (CYPs). Clinical studies involving healthy volunteers demonstrated that, compared to baseline (absence of goldenseal), CYP2D6 and CYP3A activities were reduced by 40-60% following treatment with goldenseal. Compared to the CYPs, the effects of goldenseal products on drug transporters are understudied, particularly in human subjects. Using a 'cocktail' consisting of 'probe' drug substrates for CYP3A and various transporters, the effects of goldenseal on the pharmacokinetics of each probe drug will be examined in healthy volunteers. Results will provide useful information about the risk of co-consuming goldenseal with additional drugs that are substrates for transporters.


Clinical Trial Description

Many patient groups often supplement their pharmacotherapeutic regimens with herbal and other natural products (NPs), raising concern for adverse interactions with conventional drugs. Unlike for drug-drug interactions, rigorous guidelines for assessing the risk of NP-drug interactions do not exist. The NIH-funded Center of Excellence for Natural Product-Drug Interaction (NaPDI) Research (U54 AT008909) was created in September, 2015. The mission of the NaPDI Center is to provide leadership in the identification, evaluation, and dissemination of potential clinically significant pharmacokinetic NP-drug interactions. One over-arching goal of the Center is to develop a set of Recommended Approaches to guide researchers in the proper conduct of NP-drug interaction studies. These Recommended Approaches will be based on results generated from a series of Interaction Projects that will include mechanistic human in vitro and clinical studies focused on four carefully selected high priority NPs. Using a systematic approach, the NaPDI Center selected four high priority NPs as precipitants of NP-drug interactions. One of these NPs is goldenseal, which is typically used to self-treat symptoms of the common cold, as well as numerous digestive disorders, both as a single extract and in combination with other NPs, particularly Echinacea spp. Major constituents of goldenseal include the isoquinoline alkaloids berberine, hydrastine, and hydrastinine. These constituents contain a methylenedioxyphenyl ring, a 'structural alert' that can lead to irreversible inhibition of drug metabolizing enzymes, particularly the cytochromes P450 (CYPs). Indeed, clinical studies involving healthy volunteers demonstrated that, compared to baseline (absence of goldenseal), CYP2D6 and CYP3A activities were reduced by 40-60% following administration of ~1 g of a goldenseal extract three times daily for 14 or 28 days . Compared to the CYPs, the effects of goldenseal products on drug transporters are understudied, particularly in human subjects. A 'cocktail' consisting of 'probe' drug substrates for CYPs and transporters is an efficient, cost-effective means to examine the effects of a precipitant drug or NP on the pharmacokinetics of multiple object drugs simultaneously. Such cocktails are used frequently by both academia and the pharmaceutical industry to test for the interaction potential of new chemical entities, results of which are often included in drug labels. A number of cocktails exist for the CYPs and have been used successfully over the past 20+ years. A transporter cocktail was described recently that consists of the probe drugs furosemide [organic anion transporter (OAT)1 and OAT3 substrate], metformin [(organic cation transporter 2, multidrug and toxin extrusion protein (MATE)1, and MATE2-K substrate)], and rosuvastatin [organic anion transporting polypeptide (OATP)1B1, OATP1B3, and breast cancer resistance protein substrate]. Based on the multiple scientific gaps with respect to a commonly used NP, the purpose of this healthy volunteer study is to assess the inhibitory effects of a well-characterized goldenseal product on the pharmacokinetics of the aforementioned transporter probe drugs; the CYP3A probe midazolam will be included to serve as a positive control object drug. Results will be used to develop (1) a Recommended Approach regarding clinical study design of NP-drug interactions and (2) mathematical models that can be used to predict the risk of potential goldenseal-precipitated interactions with drugs whose pharmacokinetics are influenced by CYP3A and/or transporters. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03772262
Study type Interventional
Source Washington State University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Early Phase 1
Start date April 5, 2018
Completion date March 31, 2019

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