Official Title

Modification of Asthma With Soy Isoflavone
  • Phase

    N/A
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Study Participants

    20
The purpose of this study is to determine if dietary supplementation with soy isoflavones in persistent asthma improves airway reactivity as determined by PC20 to methacholine.
Asthma is a complex disease whose prevalence and severity are determined by multiple genetic and environmental factors. The prevalence of asthma has increased during the past few decades. Although causal relationships have not been proven, changing dietary practices have paralleled the increase in asthma prevalence. Several surveys have found an association between reduced lung function and decreased consumption of antioxidants, flavonoids, and essential vitamins in a variety of respiratory conditions including asthma. These findings suggest that diet may be a factor that impacts asthma and its clinical manifestations.

Higher dietary consumption of soy isoflavones is associated with decreased self-report of cough and other allergic respiratory symptoms. Our group reported an inverse relationship between dietary intake of the soy isoflavone genistein and asthma severity. In addition, we recently demonstrated that genistein inhibits synthesis of cysteinyl-leukotrienes in eosinophils by blocking p38-dependent activation of 5-lipoxygenase, providing a plausible cellular mechanism for the benefit of soy isoflavones in asthma. We also documented that dietary soy isoflavone supplementation in asthma patients inhibited eosinophil cysteinyl-leukotriene synthesis and decreased exhaled nitric oxide, an indicator of eosinophilic airway inflammation. Our overall long-term goal is to translate these epidemiological and mechanistic findings to human disease and determine whether dietary soy isoflavones have a clinical role in asthma. We propose a clinical study powered to detect an improvement in lung function as the first stop in achieving this goal.

Our hypothesis is that dietary supplementation with isoflavones will improve lung function, reduce symptoms, and decrease airway inflammation in asthma. To test this, we will conduct a randomized placebo-controlled, cross-over study of soy isoflavone supplementation in patients with persistent asthma.
Study Started
Aug 31
2008
Primary Completion
Nov 30
2010
Study Completion
Nov 30
2010
Last Update
Jun 08
2011
Estimate

Dietary Supplement Soy Isoflavone

50mg soy isoflavone supplement consumed twice daily for a total of 100mg of soy isoflavones per day.

1 Other

Patients randomized to receive soy isoflavone twice daily for 2 weeks. Patients will cross-over and receive placebo medication for 2 weeks later in the study

2 Other

Patients randomized to receive placebo medication twice daily for 2 weeks. Patients will cross-over and receive soy isoflavone for 2 weeks later in the study

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

18 years of age or older;
Physician diagnosed asthma;
Positive methacholine bronchoprovocation test (20% fall in FEV1 at less than 8 mg/ml) with the past 3 years;
Smoking Status: non-smoker for 6 months or longer and a less than 10 pack-year cumulative smoking history.

Exclusion Criteria:

Pulmonary function FEV1< 70% predicted pre-bronchodilator;
Other major chronic illness: conditions that in the judgement of athe principle investigator would interfere with participation in the study or history of or physician diagnosis of COPD, emphysema, or chronic bronchitis;
Medication use: current consumption of soy isoflavone supplements or oral corticosteroid use within the past 6 months OR use of an investigational treatment within the previous 30 days;
Drug allergy: known adverse reaction to genistein, other phytoestrogens, or soy products;
Females of childbearing potential: pregnant or lactating or women of appropriate ago who report the possibility of pregnancy at the time of enrollment will be screened and cannot participate if pregnant;
Non-adherence: inability or unwillingness to provide informed consent or inability to swallow study medication or inability to perform baseline measurements or completion of fewer than 5 of the 7 days of screening period diary entry or inability to be contacted by telephone;
Other exclusions: recent asthma exacerbation (within 6 weeks) or recent upper respiratory tract infection (within 2 weeks) or change in diet over the past 1 month or expected change in diet (for example a weight loss diet) during the 6 week study period.
No Results Posted