A great honor and a huge challenge for China: You-you TU getting the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Yuan et al. / J Zhejiang Univ-Sci B (Biomed & Biotechnol) 2016 17(5):405-408
405
Journal of Zhejiang University-SCIENCE B (Biomedicine & Biotechnology)
ISSN 1673-1581 (Print); ISSN 1862-1783 (Online)
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A great honor and a huge challenge for China:
You-you TU getting the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Da YUAN1, Xue YANG2, Jun-chao GUO†‡1
(1Department of General Surgery, Peking Union Medical College
Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union
Medical College, Beijing 100730, China)
(2Institute of Hematology & Blood Diseases Hospital, Chinese
Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College,
Tianjin 300020, China)
†
E-mail:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1631/jzus.B1600094
Public excitement over the award of the 2015
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to the Chinese
medical scientist You-you TU for the discovery of a
herbal anti-malarial, may mislead the Chinese people
into believing that traditional Chinese herbal medicine can be used to cure all disease without any adverse effects. The aim of this paper is to explain the
advantages and disadvantages of herbal traditional
Chinese medicine (TCM) objectively.
1 Introduction
It is a great honor that the Chinese medical scientist You-you TU won the Nobel Prize in Physiology
or Medicine 2015 for discovering artemisinin, which
has saved hundreds of thousands of patients with
malaria all over the world. According to the WHO
World Malaria Report 2014 (World Health Organization, 2014), “the mortality rate from malaria will
decrease by 55% worldwide and 62% in the WHO
African Region by 2013, if the annual rate of decrease
over the past 13 years is maintained.” In children under
‡
Corresponding author
ORCID: Da YUAN, http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0364-8788
© Zhejiang University and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2016
five years of age, the positive result is even more
dramatic with a 61% decrease in mortality rate expected worldwide and a 67% decrease expected in the
WHO African Region. According to the Nobelprize.
org. Nobel Media AB (2015), more than ten thousand
people have been saved each year and in Africa alone,
artemisinin-derived drugs have been used by nearly
250 million patients. Since 2006, artemisinin-based
combination therapies (ACTs) have been recommended by the WHO as the priority treatment for
malaria and have been adopted as first-line treatments
in 79 of 88 countries where Plasmodium falciparum is
endemic (World Health Organization, 2015). Thus,
the discovery of artemisinin is really a huge contribution to the world. However, the details of its discovery were fraught (Kong and Tan, 2015).
2 Main points
When news of the Nobel Prize spread to China, it
provoked a sensation among Chinese scientists and
the public. After all, it is the first time that a civilian
from the People’s Republic of China has won the
prize since the founding of New China and the media
have reported on this news almost every day since.
Chinese citizens, being proud of this achievement,
have started to consider that herbal TCM is really
useful and may cure all diseases.
There is no question that TCM is effective in
treating some diseases, but the assumption that it can
cure all diseases is dangerous and will harm the
credibility of TCM as part of the Chinese health system. In the past, many Chinese became sick after
consuming herbal TCM at unsafe doses or when
treated inappropriately: previous cases related to
aristolochic acid-induced nephropathy; more recently
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Yuan et al. / J Zhejiang Univ-Sci B (Biomed & Biotechnol) 2016 17(5):405-408
herbal hepatitis has come into focus. Another problem
occurs when patients of some informal clinics are
prescribed by doctors who do not even have a TCM
license, leading to improper diagnosis and treatment.
Generally speaking, Chinese medicine is a gift
to the world, but its disadvantages as well as its
advantages must be considered. TCM can cure diseases for which effective western treatment is not
available, for example kidney disease (Zhong et al.,
2015), but if not used properly, it can lead to serious
health problems. Wang et al. (2009) have discussed in
detail aspects of the efficacy, safety, and quality of
herbal TCM, but more evidence-based clinical trials
are required to evaluate the benefit:risk ratio of herbal
TCM (Teschke and Eickhoff, 2015). The China Food
and Drug Administration (CFDA) has made progress
in pharmacovigilance and risk control, taking into
account the toxicology of Chinese herbal products
(Shaw, 2010; Zhang et al., 2012).
The intention of this paper is to make recommendations to Chinese consumers and the Chinese
government by taking Chinese a look at some common adverse reactions associated with the use of
herbal TCM. Several herbs have been reported to
have hepatic, renal, and gastrointestinal toxicities, but
this is just the tip of the iceberg (Shaw, 2010; Teschke
et al., 2014; Nyirimigabo et al., 2015). According to
research from 1949 to 2006 provided by Li (2007),
among 12 354 cases describing side effects, 153
deaths were associated with the use of 158 different
types of herbs. Many other cases, or even deaths,
probably went unreported.
2.1 Hepatotoxicity
Herb-induced liver injury (HILI) is one of the
most common adverse effects caused by TCM. This
has been reported in many countries around the world,
including China (Taiwan region and the mainland),
Japan, and Korea (US National Library of Medicine,
2014). According to Teschke et al. (2014), altogether
18 classifiable herbal mixtures and 39 individual
herbs that are used to cure flu and colds have been
reported to cause potential hepatotoxicity. The liver
damage usually presents with symptoms such as fatigue, nausea, vomiting, and dark urine. If no effective
actions are taken, the clinical outcome can be severe
and even leads to acute liver failure with risk of death
or the requirement for a liver transplant. Some of the
toxicities associated with herbal TCM are well under-
stood or documented: Wang et al. (2015) have described an experiment that proved kudzu root extractinduced hepatotoxicity; an experiment in rats showed
that yuanhuapine-induced intestinal and hepatic toxicities were correlated with disturbance of amino acid
metabolism, lipid metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism, and gut microflora (Chen et al., 2015); and,
from 1992 to 2015, 693 cases have been reported for
Chinese herbal hepatotoxicity (Teschke et al., 2015).
Hepatotoxicity by herbal TCM must be validly established using a causality assessment method that is
specific for the liver and hepatotoxicity such as Roussel
Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM)
(Danan and Teschke, 2016).
2.2 Nephrotoxicity
Physicians from the US published the first case
of kidney failure relating to traditional Chinese herb
use in 1993 (Izumotani et al., 1993). Subsequently,
aristolochic acid nephropathy was reported in Belgium in 2008 (Debelle et al., 2008). Nephrotoxi (...truncated)