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Effects of Ursodeoxycholic Acid and Aspirin on the Formation of Lithogenic Bile and Gallstones during Loss of Weight

List of authors.
  • Paul H. Broomfield, M.D.,
  • Rakesh Chopra, M.D.,
  • Richard C. Sheinbaum, M.D.,
  • George G. Bonorris, M.S.,
  • Alan Silverman, M.D.,
  • Leslie J. Schoenfield, M.D.,
  • and Jay W. Marks, M.D.

Abstract

We attempted to determine whether the administration of aspirin or ursodeoxycholic acid during loss of weight could prevent the development of lithogenic changes in bile and the formation of gallstones. Sixty-eight obese subjects without gallstones who were entered in a program (520 kcal per day) to lose weight were randomly assigned to receive ursodeoxycholic acid (1200 mg per day), aspirin (1300 mg per day), or placebo in double-blind fashion for up to 16 weeks. At entry, at four weeks of treatment, and at three weeks after the completion of treatment, the subjects underwent ultrasonography to detect gallstones and duodenal drainage of bile to detect cholesterol crystals and to determine the bile saturation index and glycoprotein concentration.

No gallstones or cholesterol crystals formed in the patients treated with ursodeoxycholic acid. Among the patients given placebo, gallstones formed in five (P<0.05 vs. ursodeoxycholic acid) and cholesterol crystals in six (P<0.001 vs. ursodeoxycholic acid); among those given aspirin, gallstones formed in two and cholesterol crystals in one (no significant difference from ursodeoxycholic acid treatment). By the fourth week, the bile saturation index increased in the placebo group (from 1.07±0.26 to 1.29±0.27; P<0.001), decreased in the ursodeoxycholic acid group (from 1.11±0.34 to 0.91±0.24; P<0.001), and did not change significantly in the aspirin group. The concentration of glycoprotein in bile increased in the placebo group (27.9±14.5 percent; P<0.001) but did not change significantly in the groups treated with ursodeoxycholic acid or aspirin.

We conclude that ursodeoxycholic acid prevents lithogenic changes in bile and the formation of gallstones in obese subjects during loss of weight. (N Engl J Med 1988; 319:1567–72.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by a grant (AM-37080–01) from the National Institutes of Health.

We are indebted to Mitchell Komaiko, M.D., for interpreting ultrasonograms, to Ms. Patsy Johnson for expert clerical assistance, to Health Management Resources for providing the food powder, to HDC Corporation for providing the Entero-test capsules, and to the personnel of the Cedars–Sinai Medical Center Weight Control Program for their assistance.

Author Affiliations

From Cedars–Sinai Medical Center and the University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles. Address reprint requests to Dr. Marks at the Division of Gastroenterology, Cedars–Sinai Medical Center, 8700 Beverly Blvd., #7511, Los Angeles, CA 90048.

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