Abstract

Vitamin B-6 and glutathione (GSH) are antioxidant nutrients, and inadequate vitamin B-6 may indirectly limit glutathione synthesis and further affect the antioxidant capacities. Since liver cirrhosis is often associated with increased oxidative stress and decreased antioxidant capacities, we conducted a double-blind randomized controlled trial to assess the antioxidative effect of vitamin B-6, GSH, or vitamin B-6/GSH combined supplementation in cirrhotic patients. We followed patients after the end of supplementation to evaluate the association of vitamin B-6 and GSH with disease severity. In total, 61 liver cirrhosis patients were randomly assigned to placebo, vitamin B-6 (50 mg pyridoxine/d), GSH (500 mg/d), or B-6 + GSH groups for 12 weeks. After the end of supplementation, the condition of patient’s disease severity was followed until the end of the study. Neither vitamin B-6 nor GSH supplementation had significant effects on indicators of oxidative stress and antioxidant capacities. The median follow-up time was 984 d, and 21 patients were lost to follow-up. High levels of GSH, a high GSH/oxidized GSH ratio, and high GSH-St activity at baseline (Week 0) had a significant effect on low Child–Turcotte–Pugh scores at Week 0, the end of supplementation (Week 12), and the end of follow-up in all patients after adjusting for potential confounders. Although the decreased GSH and its related enzyme activity were associated with the severity of liver cirrhosis, vitamin B-6 and GSH supplementation had no significant effect on reducing oxidative stress and increasing antioxidant capacities.

Highlights

  • The progression of liver cirrhosis is a multifactorial process that involves repetitive hepatocyte damage and subsequent irreversible scarring

  • B-6 and GSH supplementation had no significant effect on reducing oxidative stress and increasing antioxidant capacities

  • This study aimed to evaluate whether a single or combination of vitamin B-6 and GSH supplementation had effects on oxidative stress and antioxidant capacities in patients with liver cirrhosis

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Summary

Introduction

The progression of liver cirrhosis is a multifactorial process that involves repetitive hepatocyte damage and subsequent irreversible scarring. Increased oxidative stresses and decreased antioxidant capacities have been observed in cirrhotic patients [1,2,3,4,5]. Four weeks supplementation of oral GSH (1000 mg/d) neither changes the erythrocyte GSH concentration nor reduces the level of oxidative stress indicators in healthy adults [10], the plasma GSH concentration was shown to be significantly increased after three and six months of oral GSH supplementation (1000 mg/d) in healthy subjects [11]. No oral GSH supplementation has been implicated in liver cirrhosis patients, and the efficacy of oral GSH supplementation on oxidative stress and antioxidant capacities has not yet been determined

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