Oxford and Jersey, UK, August 4rd, 2016 – Clasado Biosciences Limited, the producers and suppliers of Bimuno(R) (B-GOS), a unique patented trans-galactooligosaccharide complex, today announces the publication of results for the latest clinical study using B-GOS. The human study, conducted by Nottingham Trent University’s School of Science and Technology, demonstrated a significant 40 per cent reduction in the severity of exercise-induced asthma following consumption of B-GOS.
This is the first human study to demonstrate the potential for a prebiotic to be used as an adjunct therapy in exercise induced asthma, and airway inflammation.
The study is published in the British Journal of Nutrition and entitled “A prebiotic galactooligosaccharide mixture reduces severity of hyperpnoea-induced bronchoconstriction and markers of airway inflammation”. It reports a substantial reduction in airway narrowing and inflammation in adults with exercise induced asthma following intake of B-GOS for three weeks.
Over five million people have asthma in the UK [1], and 334 million worldwide [2]. Exercise induced asthma can affect up to 90 per cent of asthma patients. The Global Asthma Network (GAN) Steering Group estimates from studies in The Global Asthma Report 2014 that the economic cost of asthma to society was USD 56 billion in the US in 2007 and EUR 19.3 billion in Europe in 2011. Indirect costs of asthma, especially the negative impact on productivity, are at least as large as the direct costs.
“The finding that B-GOS can reduce exercise induced bronchoconstriction will be of great interest to clinicians and asthma sufferers alike. Although this is early stage work, it raises the prospect that our unique carbohydrate complex could be used as an adjunct to existing asthma therapy. This could potentially benefit millions of sufferers,” said Graham Waters, CEO, Clasado. “This new study adds to Clasado’s growing portfolio of clinical and pre-clinical research demonstrating efficacy across a wide variety of different health conditions from metabolic syndrome to anxiety.”
The clinical study is the latest in a 12 year on-going research programme of pre-clinical and clinical trials being undertaken by Clasado in collaboration with a range of internationally recognised research institutes. These studies have demonstrated efficacy in a diverse range of health areas including metabolic syndrome immune function, irritable bowel syndrome, stress management and pathogen protection.
“Our study shows that B-GOS could be used as a potential additional therapy for exercise-induced asthma,” said lead researcher Dr Neil Williams, a lecturer in exercise physiology and nutrition at Nottingham Trent University’s School of Science and Technology. “We are only just starting to understand the role the gut microbiome plays in health and disease – and it is becoming increasingly recognised that microbes living in the gut can have a substantial influence on immune function and allergies which is likely to be important in airway disease. B-GOS significantly increases the growth and activity of good gut bacteria. This in turn may reduce the inflammatory response of the airways in asthma patients to exercise. Importantly, the level of improvement in lung function that appears after administration of B-GOS is perceivable by the patient and therefore potentially clinically relevant.”
[1] Asthma UK
[2] Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation’s Global Burden of Disease Study 2010
About the study
In the double blind crossover study 10 participants with exercise induced asthma and 8 control participants without asthma were randomised to receive B-GOS or placebo for 3 weeks separated by a 2 week washout. Participants undertook a hyperventilation test in the laboratory, which causes reductions in lung function replicating the symptoms and severity associated with exercise induced asthma. The falls in lung function after the hyperventilation test were compared after three weeks of prebiotic B-GOS and placebo. Blood tests also studied circulating markers of airway inflammation.
Participants receiving B-GOS demonstrated a dramatic reduction in the severity of exercise-induced asthma. B-GOS was able to suppress resting blood markers of airway inflammation (CCL17, and CRP) and completely abolish the increase in cytokine TNF-a which usually occurs with airway constriction following exercise.
The study also involved the University of Nottingham’s Respiratory Research Unit and Academic Department of Clinical Oncology.
Additional notes for editors:
Anyone with asthma who is interested in taking part in similar research in the future please contact Dr Neil Williams at Nottingham Trent University.
About Clasado
Clasado are manufacturers and suppliers of a unique patent protected trans-galactooligosaccharide complex called Bimuno (B-GOS) which exhibits a triple impact on health including re-balancing the gut microflora, protecting against gut infections and combating the chronic inflammation that causes many debilitating long term diseases. Clasado is committed to discovering, developing and harnessing the latest ground breaking prebiotic technology, providing clinically proven solutions which improve and enrich the quality of people’s lives.
Bimuno (B-GOS) is the result of intensive research and development dating back to 2000 and conducted in collaboration with the University of Reading’s Food Microbial Sciences Unit and other globally recognized research institutes.
About Nottingham Trent University
Nottingham Trent University’s five-year strategic plan Creating the University of the Future has five main ambitions: Creating Opportunity, Valuing Ideas, Enriching Society, Connecting Globally and Empowering People.
The Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education was awarded to Nottingham Trent University in November 2015. It is the highest national honour for a UK university and recognises the institution’s world-class research. Pioneering projects to improve weapons and explosives detection in luggage, enable safer production of powdered infant formula, and combat food fraud, led to the prestigious award.
This is the first human study to demonstrate the potential for a prebiotic to be used as an adjunct therapy in exercise induced asthma, and airway inflammation.
The study is published in the British Journal of Nutrition and entitled “A prebiotic galactooligosaccharide mixture reduces severity of hyperpnoea-induced bronchoconstriction and markers of airway inflammation”. It reports a substantial reduction in airway narrowing and inflammation in adults with exercise induced asthma following intake of B-GOS for three weeks.
Over five million people have asthma in the UK [1], and 334 million worldwide [2]. Exercise induced asthma can affect up to 90 per cent of asthma patients. The Global Asthma Network (GAN) Steering Group estimates from studies in The Global Asthma Report 2014 that the economic cost of asthma to society was USD 56 billion in the US in 2007 and EUR 19.3 billion in Europe in 2011. Indirect costs of asthma, especially the negative impact on productivity, are at least as large as the direct costs.
“The finding that B-GOS can reduce exercise induced bronchoconstriction will be of great interest to clinicians and asthma sufferers alike. Although this is early stage work, it raises the prospect that our unique carbohydrate complex could be used as an adjunct to existing asthma therapy. This could potentially benefit millions of sufferers,” said Graham Waters, CEO, Clasado. “This new study adds to Clasado’s growing portfolio of clinical and pre-clinical research demonstrating efficacy across a wide variety of different health conditions from metabolic syndrome to anxiety.”
The clinical study is the latest in a 12 year on-going research programme of pre-clinical and clinical trials being undertaken by Clasado in collaboration with a range of internationally recognised research institutes. These studies have demonstrated efficacy in a diverse range of health areas including metabolic syndrome immune function, irritable bowel syndrome, stress management and pathogen protection.
“Our study shows that B-GOS could be used as a potential additional therapy for exercise-induced asthma,” said lead researcher Dr Neil Williams, a lecturer in exercise physiology and nutrition at Nottingham Trent University’s School of Science and Technology. “We are only just starting to understand the role the gut microbiome plays in health and disease – and it is becoming increasingly recognised that microbes living in the gut can have a substantial influence on immune function and allergies which is likely to be important in airway disease. B-GOS significantly increases the growth and activity of good gut bacteria. This in turn may reduce the inflammatory response of the airways in asthma patients to exercise. Importantly, the level of improvement in lung function that appears after administration of B-GOS is perceivable by the patient and therefore potentially clinically relevant.”
[1] Asthma UK
[2] Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation’s Global Burden of Disease Study 2010
About the study
In the double blind crossover study 10 participants with exercise induced asthma and 8 control participants without asthma were randomised to receive B-GOS or placebo for 3 weeks separated by a 2 week washout. Participants undertook a hyperventilation test in the laboratory, which causes reductions in lung function replicating the symptoms and severity associated with exercise induced asthma. The falls in lung function after the hyperventilation test were compared after three weeks of prebiotic B-GOS and placebo. Blood tests also studied circulating markers of airway inflammation.
Participants receiving B-GOS demonstrated a dramatic reduction in the severity of exercise-induced asthma. B-GOS was able to suppress resting blood markers of airway inflammation (CCL17, and CRP) and completely abolish the increase in cytokine TNF-a which usually occurs with airway constriction following exercise.
The study also involved the University of Nottingham’s Respiratory Research Unit and Academic Department of Clinical Oncology.
Additional notes for editors:
Anyone with asthma who is interested in taking part in similar research in the future please contact Dr Neil Williams at Nottingham Trent University.
About Clasado
Clasado are manufacturers and suppliers of a unique patent protected trans-galactooligosaccharide complex called Bimuno (B-GOS) which exhibits a triple impact on health including re-balancing the gut microflora, protecting against gut infections and combating the chronic inflammation that causes many debilitating long term diseases. Clasado is committed to discovering, developing and harnessing the latest ground breaking prebiotic technology, providing clinically proven solutions which improve and enrich the quality of people’s lives.
Bimuno (B-GOS) is the result of intensive research and development dating back to 2000 and conducted in collaboration with the University of Reading’s Food Microbial Sciences Unit and other globally recognized research institutes.
About Nottingham Trent University
Nottingham Trent University’s five-year strategic plan Creating the University of the Future has five main ambitions: Creating Opportunity, Valuing Ideas, Enriching Society, Connecting Globally and Empowering People.
The Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education was awarded to Nottingham Trent University in November 2015. It is the highest national honour for a UK university and recognises the institution’s world-class research. Pioneering projects to improve weapons and explosives detection in luggage, enable safer production of powdered infant formula, and combat food fraud, led to the prestigious award.