Meta-analysis of niacin and NAD metabolite treatment in infectious disease animal studies suggests benefit but requires confirmation in clinically relevant models
Meta-analysis of niacin and NAD metabolite treatment in infectious disease animal studies suggests benefit but requires confirmation in clinically relevant models
Curran et al., 2025 | Sci Rep | Meta Analysis
Citation
Curran Colleen S, Cui Xizhong, ... Torabi-Parizi Parizad. Meta-analysis of niacin and NAD metabolite treatment in infectious disease animal studies suggests benefit but requires confirmation in clinically relevant models. Sci Rep. 2025-Apr-12;15(1):12621. doi:10.1038/s41598-025-95735-y
Abstract
Disruption of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) biosynthesis and function during infection may impair host defenses and aggravate inflammatory and oxidative organ injury. Increasingly, studies are investigating whether niacin or NAD metabolite treatment is beneficial in infection and sepsis animal models. We examined whether this preclinical experience supports clinical trials. A systematic review of three data bases was conducted through 2/29/2024 and a meta-analysis was performed comparing niacin or NAD metabolite treatment to control in adult animal models employing microbial challenges. Fifty-six studies met inclusion criteria, with 24 published after 2019. Most studies employed mouse (n = 40 studies) or rat (n = 12) models and administered either a bacterial toxin (n = 28) or bacterial (n = 19) challenge. Four and three studies employed viral or fungal challenges respectively. Studies investigated an NAD metabolite alone (n = 44), niacin alone (n = 9), or both (n = 3), usually administered before or within 24h after challenge (n = 50). Only three and four studies included standard antimicrobial support or started treatment > 24h after challenge respectively. In similar patterns with differing animal types (p ≥ 0.06), compared to control across those studies investigating the parameter, niacin or NAD treatment decreased the odds ratio of mortality [95% confidence interval (CI)] [0.28 (0.17, 0.49)] and in blood or tissue increased antioxidant levels [standardized mean differences (95%CI)] (SMD) [3.61 (2.20,5.02)] and decreased levels of microbes [- 2.44 (- 3.34, - 1.55)], histologic and permeability organ injury scoring [- 1.62 (- 2.27, - 0.98) and - 1.31(- 1.77, - 0.86) respectively], levels of TNFα, IL-6 and IL-1β [- 2.47 (- 3.30, - 1.64), - 3.17 (- 4.74, - 1.60) and - 8.44 (- 12.4, - 4.5) respectively] and myeloperoxidase (MPO) [- 1.60 (- 2.06, - 1.14)], although with significant, primarily quantitative heterogeneity for each (I2 ≥ 53%, p < 0.01) except MPO. Treatment increased blood or tissue NAD+ levels and decreased chemical organ injury measures and oxidation markers but differently comparing species (p ≤ 0.05). Only 2 and 9 survival studies described power analyses or animal randomization respectively and no study described treatment or non-histologic outcome measure blinding. Among survival studies, Egger's analysis (p = 0.002) suggested publication bias. While suggestive, published animal studies do not yet support clinical trials testing niacin and NAD metabolite treatment for infection and sepsis. Animal studies simulating clinical conditions and with randomized, blinded designs are needed to investigate this potentially promising therapeutic approach.
Key Findings
Animal studies simulating clinical conditions and with randomized, blinded designs are needed to investigate this potentially promising therapeutic approach.
Outcomes Measured
- inflammatory markers
Population
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Population | adult animal |
| Sample Size | 40 |
| Age Range | See abstract |
| Condition | See abstract |
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Niacin
- NAD
- Disease Models, Animal
- Rats
- Mice
- Communicable Diseases
Evidence Classification
- Level: Meta Analysis
- Publication Types: Journal Article, Meta-Analysis, Systematic Review
- Vertical: niacin
Provenance
- PMID: 40221506
- DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-95735-y
- PMCID: PMC11993703
- Verified: 2026-04-09 via PubMed E-utilities API
Source extracted via PubMed E-utilities API on 2026-04-09