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Safety and Tolerability of Microbial Inulinase Supplementation in Healthy Adults: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial.

Sean M Garvey, Ashley LeMoire, Jun Wang, Lois Lin, Bisma Sharif et al.
Other Gastro hep advances 2024 1 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Study Type
Randomized Controlled Trial
Population
Healthy adults
Intervention
Safety and Tolerability of Microbial Inulinase Supplementation in Healthy Adults: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial. Microbial inulinase enzyme
Comparator
Placebo
Primary Outcome
Safety and GI tolerability
Effect Direction
Neutral
Risk of Bias
Low

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Dietary fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols (FODMAPs) contribute to gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms in individuals with FODMAP sensitivity and irritable bowel syndrome. Oral enzyme supplementation is a strategy to reduce dietary FODMAP exposure and limit FODMAP-associated GI distress. This clinical trial investigated the safety of dietary supplementation with a food-grade, microbial inulinase known to hydrolyze fructan-type or inulin-type FODMAPs and related fructo-oligosaccharides in vitro. METHODS: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel design trial was conducted in 60 healthy adult participants of both sexes. Following a 2-week run-in placebo phase, participants were randomized to consume inulinase or placebo capsules twice daily with meals for 4 weeks. The total daily dose of inulinase was 2000 inulinase activity units. Safety measures included blood clinical chemistry, hematology, lipid profile, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, insulin, lactate, and uric acid. GI symptoms were recorded weekly using the 15-item Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale. RESULTS: Fifty-eight participants completed the study. There were no clinically meaningful between-group differences in blood biomarkers. During the 4-week intervention period, 5 (16.7%) of 30 participants reported 5 adverse events in the inulinase group, and 8 (26.7%) of 30 participants reported 13 adverse events in the placebo group. No statistically significant between-group differences were observed in the change from baseline to 1, 2, 3, or 4 weeks of supplementation with respect to the 15-item Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale overall or domain scores. CONCLUSION: Microbial inulinase supplementation demonstrated a favorable safety profile in healthy adults. Further investigation in a dose-ranging study in individuals with dietary FODMAP, fructan, or inulin sensitivity or irritable bowel syndrome is warranted. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05744700.

TL;DR

Microbial inulinase supplementation demonstrated a favorable safety profile in healthy adults and further investigation in a dose-ranging study in individuals with dietary FODMAP, fructan, or inulin sensitivity or irritable bowel syndrome is warranted.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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