Guest guest Posted March 15, 2011 Report Share Posted March 15, 2011 " Clinical Trials " of Nutraceuticals: Science or Scam? linda von Wartburg Mar 14, 2011 In the pharmaceutical industry, a double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial is a tightly regulated process that tests the safety and efficacy of drugs. Every safeguard is in place to prevent the results from being tainted by the interests of the investigators or sponsors, so a successful clinical trial is the best guarantee we have that the drug is safe and effective. But what about in the nutraceutical business, which is not regulated by the FDA and is not required to support their claims with clinical trials? The words " clinical trial, " and the guarantee they imply, still have power to instill trust, a power that some nutraceuticals are trying to harness in the interest of marketing. One example of a product whose manufacturers are very enthused about clinical trials is DiaMetrix. DiaMetrix is a nutraceutical composed of 20 mg of vitamin <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/food/vitamins/> C, 200 mcg of biotin, 200 mcg of chromium, and 3200 mg of various herbs, that is marketed to people with type 2 <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/community/type-2-issues/> diabetes <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/> , ostensibly to lower blood sugar <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/monitoring/blood-sugar/> . On its website, you find the following: " Ask yourself this question: Is the product I'm about to put into my body supported by a double-blind clinical trial? Most believe that it's possible to know if a natural approach works by simply trying it....What you should be asking is 'Show me the double-blind study and I'll pay attention.' Otherwise, it's little more than hot air. " Nothing to argue with there. But how does a nutraceutical go about getting a clinical trial? And does getting one prove that their claims are more than hot air? It all depends on how the clinical trial is performed. When Ken Hampshire and his colleagues decided to get themselves a clinical trial of DiaMetrix in 2007, they contacted Montgomery of Fenestra Research in Las Vegas, Nevada, perhaps enticed by this information on the Fenestra website: " It is important to understand that while the research is double blind and un-biased, Melonie and Fenestra Research are 100% on your team. Reports are written to highlight product benefits. Take your nutritional product sales to new heights by partnering with Fenestra Research. Make us your ally...Before Your Competition Does...Contact Fenestra Research today for Special Promotional Pricing. " Apparently Fenestra is quite a bargain as clinical trials go. As their press release notes: " While comparable human clinical studies can often run into the $200,000 to $400,000 range,...the Fenestra Research Labs marketing advantage is that their studies can cost as little as $30,000 and are by far the most cost-effective and conclusive clinical trials available in the marketplace today. " Fenestra's previous " clinical trials " have supported the claims of a diverse group of concoctions and devices, including the Stirwand, a pen-sized plastic container filled with " granulated mineral " whose " primary function is to increase the hydration potential of water....The minerals do NOT leave the container - it's the energy of the minerals that does the magic. " According to the manufacturer, stirring a glass, or even 500 gallons, of water with one of these 90-dollar plastic sticks will change the properties of the water, such that you will be more hydrated by drinking it than by drinking the original, unstirred water. They go on to say, with reason, if not clarity: " Convention will debate this, as inert objects traditionally do not produce substantial results in water. In this case however, a quantum phenomenon trumps a Newtonian fundamental. " According to Fenestra's " clinical trial " of the Stirwand, it indeed does. Fenestra Research conducted " a 90 day controlled study " that purportedly " showed an average increase in hydration of the participants that used the Stirwand of nearly 30%. It also showed increased blood oxygen levels of over 10% and decreased cellular toxins by over 18%. " If you'd rather not use a Stirwand, you can get another brand of plain water that was tested by Fenestra. According to Montgomery, " GlaciaNova's Glacial Water product is the most hydrating water product we have ever tested....It has shown an average 38.2% intracellular hydration improvement whereas all other commercially available water products we have tested so far have shown less than 5% hydration increase on average with only few exceptions. " In her report on LifeWave patches, which are regarded as a hoax by the Worldwide Scam Network, Montgomery wrote: " We find that the daily use of the Energy Patches by LifeWave Products did improve the energy levels in 100% of our test subjects. This was proven using the Fenestra Research Labs Optimal Wellness Test. " The Optimum Wellness Test is a urine and saliva test invented by Ms. Montgomery that is purported to " identify and measure 34 clinical markers in human physiology to a very high degree of accuracy and conclude the level of 'wellness' exhibited by individual clients. " " Dr. " Melonie Montgomery, the owner of Fesestra Research, is described on her website as " scheduled to complete her PhD In Holistic Nutrition in early 2006. " Her masters degree is from Clayton College of Natural Health, an unaccredited online company that recently closed. Montgomery's LinkedIn profile states that " We do Clinical Studies on mostlynatural [sic] products for human and equine product [sic]. We can help you prove your products are safe and effecitve [sic] as well as support marketing claims. " So what happened when DiaMetrix was tested by Melonie Montgomery of Fenestra Research? As Mr. Hampshire, the product formulator, said, " The results were pretty impressive! We saw all of the participants get tremendous improvement on the A1C <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/monitoring/a1c-test/> side " and other remarkable improvements which were " ...unheard of with any product in a clinical study, be it natural or pharmaceutical. " Clearly, Fenestra Research came though on its promise. That wasn't the end of the testing story for DiaMetrix, however. Mr. Hampshire said, " We were very excited about these results, of course, and we were then challenged to try to understand a little bit more about the mechanisms of action. " So they arranged with Dr. Rob Streeper to do a head-to-head comparison of DiaMetrix against metformin <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/medications/metformin/> , Actos, and Byetta <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/medications/byetta/> in mice. Because the study was, oddly enough, not designed to compare the effects of DiaMetrix on blood glucose, Dr. Streeper emphasized the effect on markers of inflammation. Said Dr. Streeper, ' " We don't look at high blood glucose as a kind of lever that can be grasped to control the disease. It's probably more important to look at the systemic inflammatory markers, because they are the true mediators of the tissue damage. " According to Dr. Streeper, DiaMetrix bested the other medications with regard to " down-regulation on a broad range of inflammatory markers. " His focus on anti-inflammatory markers as opposed to blood glucose lowering may be tied to the discussion section of the mouse study, which states that type 2 <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/community/type-2-issues/> diabetes is an autoimmune disease. That opinion was also voiced very firmly by Mr. Hampshire, who noted that " it's well supported by a number of studies showing that obese people have higher circulating inflammatory mediator levels, and this tends to predispose to the development of diabetes. " So, what is DiaMetrix actually supposed to do? According to its website, " Diametrix is designed for a single purpose: to increase the body's sensitivity to insulin <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/medications/insulin/> ...It's been scientifically shown to increase the body's sensitivity to insulin...If you're looking to lower your blood sugar levels, DiaMetrix is the only diabetes product specifically formulated to increase your body's sensitivity to insulin. " Asked how it does that, Mr. Hampshire responded, " We're not exactly sure how that occurs. That statement that you found on the DiaMetrix website, I wrote some years ago, in fact, based largely on the observations that we've had based on the human clinical and anecdotal stories, thousands of which we've had over the years. " His own website's cautionsary advice about the invalidity of anecdotal evidence does not, apparently, weigh heavily with Mr. Hampshire. Mr. Hampshire noted that based upon the mouse study, " We know that DiaMetrix works in much the same manner that Byetta does to get the results that it does. It's just that it's more effective in some of those mechanisms. " Given that Byetta is a GLP-1 mimetic with a very complex mechanism of action, that is quite a leap from a mouse study of inflammatory markers. Dr. Streeper, who was apparently not ready to make that leap, went on to explain that how DiaMetrix works to reduce insulin <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/complications-and-care/insulin-resista nce/> resistance " is probably best understood by reference to the literature, especially more recent literature looking at sepsis in intensive care patients. " Asked about his other research, Dr. Streeper said, " I've done internal things, and we've also done contract work for a variety of pharmaceutical companies in various roles that we've played throughout our careers. I don't think we can name our customers....We're bound by confidentiality rules, for other employments we've had. " Although the people at DiaMetrix appear to be of mixed minds regarding how their product is supposed to work, they are not reticent about advising people to take DiaMetrix instead of their prescribed medications. According to the website, " It would be one thing if pharmaceutical drugs actually worked and kept blood glucose from rising too high, but for most people, they don't. Most of our customers add DiaMetrix to their current regime...The DiaMetrix dosage is gradually increased, while the pharmaceutical drug dosage is slowly decreased. Ultimately, one can be substituted for the other. " Mr. Hampshire added, " This is a decision only they and their doctors can arrive at, but in our experience, this is exactly what we've found....from the words of our customers, that's exactly what they have found. " Apparently, this is one of those times when he does not consider anecdotal evidence " hot air. " Whether Mr. Hampshire and the others at DiaMetrix are intentionally using pseudo-science to manipulate potential customers is a matter for speculation. There's a lot of money to be made with a successful product, but perhaps they are just very convinced of their product's efficacy. Still, the advice on their website is very much to the point: " Medical conditions are an area of life in which direct, common sense observations aren't reliable at all. The insights brought to us by double-blind studies has [sic] been invaluable. It's the only form of unbiased valuation we have. " Their attempts to scientifically prove their product's efficacy are not credible, in part because they were carried out by people with an investment in the results. According to Marcia Angell, an editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, " It is often possible to make clinical trials come out pretty much any way you want, which is why it's so important that investigators be truly disinterested in the outcome of their work.... " Maybe one of these days, more nutraceuticals will carry out legitimate clinical trials to test their efficacy. Meanwhile, Fenestra Research is not the answer. _____ Categories: Health <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/community/health/> , Health <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/research/health-research/> Research, Supplements <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/food/supplements/> , Type 1 <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/community/type-1-issues/> Issues, Type 2 <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/browse/community/type-2-issues/> Issues _____ <https://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2009/02/10/6087/you-can-help-support-di abetes-health/> Donate to Diabetes Health Recommend this : Not at all Somewhat Moderately Highly Very Highly Average Rating: _____ You May Also Be Interested In... _____ Click <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2011/03/14/7086/clinical-trials-of-nutra ceuticals-science-or-scam/?isComment=1#comments> Here To View Or Post Comments Comment0 <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2011/03/14/7086/clinical-trials-of-nutra ceuticals-science-or-scam/?isComment=1#comments> comments - Mar 14, 2011 - ***** <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/ads/www/delivery/ck.php?oaparams=2__bannerid= 695__zoneid=531__cb=3b11da5a0f__oadest=http%3A%2F%2Fad.doubleclick.net%2Fjum p%2FN5371.DiabetesHealth.com%2FB5103929.4%3Babr%3D%21ie4%3Babr%3D%21ie5%3Bsz %3D728x90%3Bpc%3D%5BTPAS_ID%5D%3Bord%3D3b11da5a0f%3F> Advertisement Home <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/> | Charts <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/charts/> | Forums <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/forums/> | Digital Edition <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/survey/demographics.html> | TV <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/tv/> | Subscribe <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/customer-service/subscribe.html?code=M5DHA> | Contact Us <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/company/contact-us.html> | Donate <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/donate> | Sitemap <http://www.diabeteshealth.com/sitemap.html> C1991-2011 Diabetes Health Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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