While the natural compound found in plants such as turmeric and barberry has been used in traditional Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine for thousands of years, it has yet to be widely used in clinics, according to Kamal Dua, an Australian-Indian scientist from the University of Technology, Sydney.
“All that historical and ancient knowledge of the medicinal plant, [has been] known by people for ages but has never been translated in the clinic,” lead researcher and senior pharmacy lecturer Dua told The Epoch Times.
From all the Ayurvedic medicines and indigenous medicinal plants he examined, he found the plant compound berberine to be the most surprising, demonstrating impressive effects against lung cancer.
The researchers spanning Ireland (Ronan MacLoughlin), Australia (Prof. Brian Oliver, Prof. Phil Hansbro, Keshav Raj Paudel and Bikash Manandhar), Saudi Arabia (Abdullah Alnuqaydan and Abdulmajeed Almutary) and India (Sachin Kumar Singh and Prof. Monica Gulati) found that berberine stops the growth of tumour cells in lung cancer, the world’s leading cause of cancer-related deaths, with around 1.8 million deaths reported annually.
“This is possible by inhibition of key genes and proteins associated with cancer cell proliferation and migration,” he explained.
How to Take Berberine
Berberine can be found in a variety of plants, such as goldenseal, goldthread, Oregon grape, Phellodendron, and Coptis chinensis, a species of goldthread flowering plant native to China.Dua notes that the benefits of the supplement have been limited by its lack of ability to dissolve in water and be absorbed in the gut, as well as toxicity at higher doses. Digestive side effects including diarrhea, constipation, flatulence and abdominal pain have been reported.
To overcome these challenges, the research team has developed a novel method of using liquid crystalline nanoparticles to safely and effectively encapsulate small doses of berberine inside.
“It means the patient does not have to take multiple doses. It also has fewer side effects compared to the various other chemical-based drugs,” he said.
“Berberine is part of Eastern medicine, and so it’s not something that we traditionally use in Western medicine. I think it’s interesting and intriguing because we’re looking at things [we] know have some benefit in Eastern medicine, [and are putting them] into a study to help translate it to Western medicine,” Onugha said.
“It’s always promising, but it is in a lab and a lot of things we find in a lab do not necessarily translate to the treatment of patients,” Onugha continued.
The Future of Berberine
Dua is now working closely with Sydney-based companies to do further research and deliver these nanoparticles to the bedside.Its success will lead to the team looking at it being used for other illnesses, even Alzheimer’s, Dua said.
“We are now we are testing the same thing on other respiratory diseases like asthma and also on pulmonary fibrosis because inflammation is a common condition in every disease,” he said.
“Inflammation happens in every disease whether it is a brain, gut, or lung, and berberine has clearly shown that it is reducing the inflammation. When it is reducing the inflammation it may also have the potential to work in various other disease states, neurodegenerative diseases, and maybe in other gastrointestinal diseases.”