A Smart + Strong Site
Subscribe to:
E-newsletters
POZ magazine
POZ Personals
Sign In / Join
Username:
Password:

Back to home » Treatment News » Top Stories

Most Popular Stories
Marijuana and its CD4 Receptors: A New HIV Treatment Strategy?
Pathway to a Cure: Cancer Drug Helps Purge HIV From Resting Cells
Life Expectancy With HIV Increases Dramatically
Undetectable Viral Load? Not Necessarily in Semen
Engineering CD8 Cells to Kill HIV in Tissues
Pathway to a Cure: Positive Results Continue for Sangamo's CCR5 Gene Therapy
Revised U.S. Guidelines: HIV Treatment is Recommended for All People Living With HIV
What's That Mean?
(just double-click it!)

If you don't understand one of the words in this article, just double-click it. A window will open with a definition from mondofacto's On-line Medical Dictionary. If the double-click feature doesn't work in your browser, you can enter the word below:

Most Popular Lessons
Aging & HIV
The HIV Life Cycle
Shingles
Herpes Simplex Virus
Syphilis & Neurosyphilis
Treatments for Opportunistic Infections (OIs)
What is AIDS & HIV?
More News

Have medical or treatment news about HIV? Send press releases, news tips and other announcements to editors@aidsmeds.com.

Click here for more news


emailrssprint

September 24, 2009

ICAAC: Nutritional Supplement Slows CD4 Loss in Untreated HIV

A nutritional supplement developed by Danone—a French food company known in the United States as Dannon and most recognized for its dairy products—might slow the decline of CD4 cells in people living with HIV not yet receiving antiretroviral (ARV) therapy, according to new study results reported September 14 at the 49th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC) in San Francisco. According to a news release from Nutricia, Danone’s parent company, the results of the 52-week study testing the nutritional compound currently known as NR100157 exceeded the company’s expectations and is likely to be developed further.

NR100157 contains five major groups of compounds: probiotic oligosaccharides, N-acetylcysteine (NAC), bovine colostrums, long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids and micronutrients.

In 2007, Nutricia started the international BITE study—a clinical trial comparing NR100157 with placebo in 340 people living with HIV not yet on ARV therapy in Australia, Argentina, Brazil, Italy, the Netherlands, Thailand, the United States or the United Kingdom. About half of the 340 patients enrolled received the NR100157, which is produced as a powder and dissolved in liquid or mixed in food.

About halfway through the study in 2008, a planned interim analysis involving 52 weeks of follow-up was conducted by the researchers, including Pedro Cahn, MD, PhD, of the Buenos Aires University Medical School in Argentina, who presented the preliminary findings at ICAAC.

Twenty-five of the 168 study volunteers randomized to receive NR100157 dropped out of the study because they needed to begin ARV therapy. In the placebo group, consisting of 172 study volunteers, 29 dropped out so that they could start ARV treatment. More than twice as many people living with HIV in the NR100157 group, compared with those in the placebo group, quit the study because of possible side effects, notably bloating and flatulence.

Despite high rates of discontinuation during the first half of the two-year study, Cahn and his colleagues noted encouraging differences between the two groups. In the NR100157 group, the average CD4 decline during the 52-week follow-up period was 28 cells, compared with 68 cells in the placebo group—a difference of 40 cells that just managed to qualify as statistically significant.

Based on these results, an independent Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) recommended that the study be stopped prematurely. What remains unclear, however, is why a study of this nature would be stopped when there is little evidence of harm, limited commercial access to the tested agent and a desire for long-term follow-up data from studies of nutritional supplements. 

Search: NR100157, supplement, propbiotic, CD4 cells, Danone, Dannon, BITE, Nutricia, ICAAC


Scroll down to comment on this story.

emailrssprint

Name:

(will display; 2-50 characters)

Email:

(will NOT display)

City:

(will display; optional)

Comment (500 characters left):

(Note: The AIDSmeds team review all comments before they are posted. Please do not include ":" "@" "<" ">" in your comment. The opinions expressed by people providing comments are theirs alone. They do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Smart + Strong, which is not responsible for the accuracy of any of the information supplied by people providing comments.)

| Posting Rules

Previous Comments:

       


[Go to top]

Quick Links
AIDSmeds en Español
About HIV and AIDS
Lab Tests
Clinical Trials
HIV Meds
Starting Treatment
Switching Treatment
Drug Resistance
Side Effects
Disclosure
Lipodystrophy
Hepatitis & HIV
Women & Children
Fact Sheets
Treatment News
Community Forums
Blogs
Conference Coverage
Health Services Directory
POZ Magazine


    blue_water
    New York City
    New York


    newlife202
    JOLIET
    Illinois


    tempeststar
    Midtown NYC
    New York


    John_Philly_2012
    Philadelphia
    Pennsylvania
Click here to join POZ Personals!
Conference Coverage

19th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI 2012)
Seattle, Washington
March 5 - 8, 2012


6th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2011)
Rome, Italy
July 17 - 20, 2011


18th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI 2011)
Boston, MA
February 27 - March 2, 2011


more conference coverage

[ about AIDSmeds | AIDSmeds advisory board | our staff | advertising policy | advertise/contact us]
© 2012 Smart + Strong. All Rights Reserved. Terms of use and Your privacy.
Smart + Strong® is a registered trademark of CDM Publishing, LLC.