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Elderberry Extract Outpatient Influenza Treatment for Emergency Room Patients Ages 5 and Above: a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial.

Michael Macknin, Kathy Wolski, Jeffrey Negrey, Sharon Mace
RCT Journal of general internal medicine 2020 14 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Randomized Controlled Trial
Tamaño de muestra
87
Población
Influenza patients
Intervención
Elderberry Extract Outpatient Influenza Treatment for Emergency Room Patients Ages 5 and Above: a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial. 15 ml
Comparador
Placebo
Resultado primario
whether elderberry extract decreases influenza's duration and severity
Dirección del efecto
Neutral
Riesgo de sesgo
Low

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Black elderberry, used medicinally for centuries, decreased influenza duration by 4 days in three previous peer-reviewed trials. US elderberry sales, possibly related to a "high severity" and "high activity" influenza season from January to March 2018, more than doubled from 2017 to 2018 to > $100 million. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether elderberry extract decreases influenza's duration and severity. DESIGN: FDA-approved, investigator-initiated, Investigational New Drug, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. Conducted January 2018-April 2019 in three emergency rooms, two suburban and one urban, in the Midwestern Health System. PATIENTS: Eighty-seven consecutive, consenting patients, over age four, with < 48 h of at least 2 moderate-severity influenza symptoms and positive polymerase chain reaction influenza test. INTERVENTION: Patients from age 5 to 12 years received placebo or 15 ml (5.7 g) elderberry extract orally twice a day for 5 days; those > 12 years received 15 ml 4 times a day for 5 days. Patients were permitted to choose to also receive the standard dosage of oseltamivir. MEASUREMENTS: Primary: days until all symptoms were none or mild for 21.5 h. Secondary: days to complete symptom resolution for 24 h. RESULTS: The 87 participants were randomized to receive placebo (n = 44) or elderberry (n = 43). The average age was 25 ± 20 years, and 56% were male. The average number of days to reach all symptoms none or mild for 21.5 h in the placebo group was 4.9 ± 2.8 days compared to 5.3 ± 3.6 in the elderberry group (p = 0.57). The average number of days to complete resolution was 8.7 ± 3.8 and 8.6 ± 3.9 in the placebo and elderberry group, respectively (p = 0.87). LIMITATIONS: Small sample size, but powered > 0.90 to detect 2-day benefit of elderberry versus placebo. CONCLUSIONS: We found no evidence that elderberry benefits the duration or severity of influenza. Post hoc analysis suggested primary outcomes with elderberry taken alone (without oseltamivir) were 2 days worse than with placebo taken alone. Our results contradict previous studies and demonstrate the need for further studies. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT03410862.

TL;DR

Black elderberry, used medicinally for centuries, decreased influenza duration by 4 days in three previous peer-reviewed trials, but evidence that elderberry benefits the duration or severity of influenza is found.

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