Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of Mastiha supplementation on NAFLD: The MAST4HEALTH Randomised, Controlled Trial

Charalampia Amerikanou, Stavroula Kanoni, Andriana C. Kaliora, Angela Barone, Mladen Bjelan, Giuseppe D’Auria, Aristea Gioxari, María José Gosalbes, Sofia Mouchti, Maria G. Stathopoulou, Beatriz Soriano, Stefan Stojanoski, Rajarshi Banerjee, Maria Halabalaki, Eleni V. Mikropoulou, Aimo Kannt, John Lamont, Carlos Lloréns, Fernando Marascio, Miriam Marascio, Francisco J. Roig, Ilias Smyrnioudis, Iraklis Varlamis, Sophie Visvikis‐Siest, Milan Vukić, Nataša Milić, Milica Medic‐Stojanoska, Lucia Cesarini, Jonica Campolo, Amalia Gastaldelli, Panos Deloukas, Maria Giovanna Trivella, M. Pilar Francino, George Dedoussis

2021Molecular Nutrition & Food Research33 citationsDOI

Abstract

Scope Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common liver disease with poor therapeutic strategies. Mastiha possesses antioxidant/anti‐inflammatory and lipid‐lowering properties. The authors investigate the effectiveness of Mastiha as a nonpharmacological intervention in NAFLD. Methods and Results Ninety‐eight patients with NAFLD in three countries (Greece, Italy, Serbia) are randomly allocated to either Mastiha or Placebo for 6 months, as part of a multicenter, randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, parallel‐group clinical trial. The authors assess NAFLD severity via magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanning and LiverMultiScan technique and evaluate the effectiveness of Mastiha through medical, anthropometric, biochemical, metabolomic, and microbiota assessment. Mastiha is not superior to Placebo on changes in iron‐corrected T1 (cT1) and Liver Inflammation Fibrosis score (LIF) in entire patient population; however, after BMI stratification (BMI ≤ 35 kg m ‐2 and BMI > 35 kg m ‐2 ), severely obese patients show an improvement in cT1 and LIF in Mastiha versus Placebo. Mastiha increases dissimilarity of gut microbiota, as shown by the Bray‐Curtis index, downregulates Flavonifractor , a known inflammatory taxon and decreases Lysophosphatidylcholines‐(LysoPC) 18:1, Lysophosphatidylethanolamines‐(LysoPE) 18:1, and cholic acid compared to Placebo. Conclusion Mastiha supplementation improves microbiota dysbiosis and lipid metabolite levels in patients with NAFLD, although it reduces parameters of liver inflammation/fibrosis only in severely obese patients.

Topics & Concepts

Nonalcoholic fatty liver diseasePlaceboMedicineInternal medicineGastroenterologyGut floraLipid profilePopulationCirrhosisPlacebo-controlled studyRandomized controlled trialFatty liverDiseasePathologyCholesterolImmunologyDouble blindAlternative medicineEnvironmental healthLiver Disease Diagnosis and TreatmentGut microbiota and healthDietary Effects on Health