4.1 Article

Effect of Silymarin Treatment on Circulating Bilirubin and Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors in Healthy Men: A Single-Blind, Randomized Crossover Trial

Journal

CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY IN DRUG DEVELOPMENT
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 1156-1165

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cpdd.962

Keywords

antioxidant; cholesterol; Legalon; silibinin; silymarin; unconjugated bilirubin

Funding

  1. Office of Research Project Grant by the Endeavour College of Natural Health [20160824]
  2. School of Pharmacy and Medical Science, Griffith University

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The findings of this study challenge previous reports and manufacturer claims of hyperbilirubinemia following silymarin treatment and are critical to guiding researchers toward an effective means to mildly elevate bilirubin, which evidence suggests could protect from cardiovascular disease.
This clinical trial (ACTRN12619001296123) investigated the impact of silymarin (Legalon (R)) on circulating bilirubin concentration, lipid status, systemic inflammation, and antioxidant status. The study design was a randomized, placebo-controlled, single-blind crossover trial of healthy men (18-65 years), conducted at Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia. Participants were recruited from Griffith University and were randomized to silymarin (140 mg silymarin capsules thrice daily) or placebo (3 capsules containing mannitol taken daily) for 14 days followed by a >= 4-week washout and crossover to the other arm. The main outcomes were whether silymarin treatment would increase serum bilirubin concentration by >0.29 mg/dL, change serum lipid status (cholesterol and triglycerides), inflammation (c-reactive protein), and antioxidant capacity (ferric reducing ability of plasma) compared with baseline. Silymarin consumption (n = 17) did not affect serum concentrations of unconjugated bilirubin (0.73 versus 0.67 mg/dL, P = .79), cholesterol (185 versus 189 mg/dL, P = .19), triglycerides (94.2 versus 92.3 mg/dL, P = .79), c-reactive protein (0.17 versus 0.09 mg/dL, P = .23), or antioxidant status (6.61 versus 6.67 mg Fe2+/dL, P = .40). These findings challenge previous reports and manufacturer claims of hyperbilirubinemia following silymarin treatment and are critical to guiding researchers toward an effective means to mildly elevate bilirubin, which evidence suggests could protect from cardiovascular disease.

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