The present invention relates to the field of botanical formulations, particularly it relates to phytodrug or plant medicament for treatment and management of sickle cell disease and methods of preparing and using same.
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a hereditary blood disorder, affecting over 75,000 people in the United States. Sickle cell disease (SCD) affects over twenty million people throughout the world and is particularly common among those whose ancestors come from sub-Saharan Africa, Spanish-speaking regions in the Western Hemisphere (South America, the Caribbean, and Central America), Saudi Arabia, India, and Mediterranean countries such as Turkey, Greece, and Italy.
In the U.S., those with SCD have an average mortality in their 40s, a poor quality of life and high medical costs. In SCD, a mutation in β-globin causes deoxygenated sickle hemoglobin (deoxy-HbS) to form insoluble polymers inside red blood cells (RBCs), which deforms the RBCs into rigid shapes or sickle cells that occlude capillaries and small blood vessels. The only disease-modifying drug approved for use in SCD patients is hydroxyurea, an anti-cancer drug. Not all patients respond to hydroxyurea, and it can be poorly tolerated causing myelosuppression in some patients. Despite extensive studies on SCD by researchers over several decades, there has been little progress in the development of additional disease modifying agents. Therefore, new, safer and more effective therapeutic anti-sickling agents are needed to treat patients with SCD, particularly children, which could improve the quality of life, increase the life expectancies, and reduce the estimated 100,000 hospitalizations and $500 million in direct hospital costs due to sickle cell disease in the United States. Sickle cell disease occurs in 1 in every 500 African American births,
U.S. Pat. No. 5,800,819 describes a composition requiring extracts from at least four plant materials, viz., Piper guineense, Eugenia caryophyllata, Sorghum bicolor and Pterocarpus osun for treating sickle cell disease. The present invention provides a distinctly different and improved plant formulation that is more efficacious against SCD and simpler to formulate.
It is an object of this invention to provide an improved and efficacious botanical medicament for the treatment and management of sickle cell disease.
It is an additional object of this invention to provide a method for the preparation of an improved plant formulation for treating SCD.
Various other objects and advantages of the invention will become obvious from the detailed description of the invention.
Various objects and advantages of the invention are achieved by preparing a botanical composition, comprising a mixture of extractions of Piper guineense, Eugenia caryophyllum and Sorghum bicolor plant material, without the use or extraction of Pterocarpus osun stem, said mixture containing a drug material effective for treating sickle cell disease. The composition may further comprise pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, excipients, buffers, emollients, and the like, well known to one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs.
Sorghum bicolor seeds were obtained from USDA (ID #IS2724, REDHAGARI). The seeds were grown under normal green house conditions. Canadian pot mixture fortified with anhydrous ferric chloride (10 mg /pot) was used as the growth medium. Watering was done with tap water once a week. Every month the leaves were removed and air dried. The dried leaves were extracted with aqueous sodium bicarbonate (7.4% concentration W/V at a pH ranging from about 8 to about 8.3) by stirring for about 8 hrs at normal ambient temperature. The extract was allowed to settle, then decanted, filtered, centrifuged and freeze dried.
Piper guineense seeds and Eugenia caryophyllum fruit were extracted similarly. The freeze dried components were thoroughly blended to form a uniform mixture, which could be formulated as tablets, granules, solutions, capsules and the like by well known methods. The sickle cell bioassay was carried out by using blood removed from a sickle cell subject and exposed to the extract in vitro to measure antisickling activity employing counting and imaging techniques as described in Iyamu, et al, British Journal of Hematology, (2002), 118: 337-343.
Sorghum bicolor,
Piper guineense
caryophyllum
Sorghum bicolor,
Piper guineense
caryophyllum
Sorghum bicolor,
Piper guineense
caryophyllum
Sorghum bicolor,
Piper guineense
caryophyllum
These results indicate that a formulation comprising a mixture of extracts obtained from Sorghum bicolor, Piper guineense, and Eugenia caryophyllum plant material, but devoid of Pterocarpus osun extract, is a potent agent having as much as two-fold greater anti-sickling efficacy compared to the prior art formulation disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,800,819 when prepared under similar condition, but with a lower preferred pH of 8.3.