A standardised frankincense extract reduces disease activity in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (the SABA phase IIa trial)

  • Klarissa Hanja Stürner
  • Jan-Patrick Stellmann
  • Jan Dörr
  • Friedemann Paul
  • Tim Friede
  • Sven Schammler
  • Stefanie Reinhardt
  • Susanne Gellissen
  • Gainet Weissflog
  • Tobias Djamsched Faizy
  • Oliver Werz
  • Sabine Fleischer
  • Lea A I Vaas
  • Frank Herrmann
  • Ole Pless
  • Roland Martin
  • Christoph Heesen

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether oral administration of a standardised frankincense extract (SFE) is safe and reduces disease activity in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS).

METHODS: We performed an investigator-initiated, bicentric phase IIa, open-label, baseline-to-treatment pilot study with an oral SFE in patients with RRMS (NCT01450124). After a 4-month baseline observation phase, patients were treated for 8 months with an option to extend treatment for up to 36 months. The primary outcome measures were the number and volume of contrast-enhancing lesions (CEL) measured in MRI during the 4-month treatment period compared with the 4-month baseline period. Eighty patients were screened at two centres, 38 patients were included in the trial, 28 completed the 8-month treatment period and 18 of these participated in the extension period.

RESULTS: The SFE significantly reduced the median number of monthly CELs from 1.00 (IQR 0.75-3.38) to 0.50 (IQR 0.00-1.13; difference -0.625, 95% CI -1.25 to -0.50; P<0.0001) at months 5-8. We observed significantly less brain atrophy as assessed by parenchymal brain volume change (P=0.0081). Adverse events were generally mild (57.7%) or moderate (38.6%) and comprised mainly gastrointestinal symptoms and minor infections. Mechanistic studies showed a significant increase in regulatory CD4+ T cell markers and a significant decrease in interleukin-17A-producing CD8+ T cells indicating a distinct mechanism of action of the study drug.

INTERPRETATION: The oral SFE was safe, tolerated well and exhibited beneficial effects on RRMS disease activity warranting further investigation in a controlled phase IIb or III trial.

CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT01450124; Results.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0022-3050
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 04.2018
PubMed 29248894