Title Efficacy of broccoli and glucoraphanin in COVID-19: from hypothesis to proof-of-concept with three experimental clinical cases /
Authors Bousquet, Jean ; Le Moing, Vincent ; Blain, Hubert ; Czarlewski, Wienczyslawa ; Zuberbier, Torsten ; de la Torre, Rafael ; Lozano, Nieves Pizarro ; Reynes, Jacques ; Bedbrook, Anna ; Cristol, Jean-Paul ; Cruz, Alvaro A ; Fiocchi, Alessandro ; Haahtela, Tari ; Iaccarino, Guido ; Klimek, Ludger ; Kuna, Piotr ; Melén, Erik ; Mullol, Joaquim ; Samolinski, Boleslaw ; Valiulis, Arūnas ; Anto, Josep M
DOI 10.1016/j.waojou.2020.100498
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Is Part of World Allergy Organization journal.. Amsterdam : Elsevier. 2021, vol. 14, no. 1, art. no. 100498, p. 1-16.. ISSN 1939-4551
Keywords [eng] COVID-19 ; Nrf2 ; broccoli ; cough challenge ; TRPA1 ; TRPV1
Abstract [eng] OVID-19 is described in a clinical case involving a patient who proposed the hypothesis that Nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2)-interacting nutrients may help to prevent severe COVID-19 symptoms. Capsules of broccoli seeds containing glucoraphanin were being taken before the onset of SARS-CoV-2 infection and were continued daily for over a month after the first COVID-19 symptoms. They were found to reduce many of the symptoms rapidly and for a duration of 6–12 h by repeated dosing. When the patient was stable but still suffering from cough and nasal obstruction when not taking the broccoli capsules, a double-blind induced cough challenge confirmed the speed of onset of the capsules (less than 10 min). A second clinical case with lower broccoli doses carried out during the cytokine storm confirmed the clinical benefits already observed. A third clinical case showed similar effects at the onset of symptoms. In the first clinical trial, we used a dose of under 600 μmol per day of glucoraphanin. However, such a high dose may induce pharmacologic effects that require careful examination before the performance of any study. It is likely that the fast onset of action is mediated through the TRPA1 channel. These experimental clinical cases represent a proof-of-concept confirming the hypothesis that Nrf2-interacting nutrients are effective in COVID-19. However, this cannot be used in practice before the availability of further safety data, and confirmation is necessary through proper trials on efficacy and safety.
Published Amsterdam : Elsevier
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2021
CC license CC license description