Background and Significance
1.1 Role of NAD+ in Physiology Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is a key coenzyme
in all living organisms, existing in oxidized (NAD+) and reduced (NADH) forms. Beyond its
vital role in redox reactions and ATP generation, NAD+ also serves as a co-substrate for
several signaling enzymes such as sirtuins, PARPs, and CD38. Systemic NAD+ insufficiency
can cause diseases like pellagra; reduced NAD+ availability has been implicated in aging
and age-related disorders.
1.2 Oral NAD+ Precursors Administration of NAD+ precursors (e.g., NMN, NR, NAM) can boost
NAD+ levels. Although human research has shown that oral NMN raises blood NAD+
concentrations, many aspects of its absorption, metabolism, and overall bioavailability
are still poorly understood. Rodent studies suggest oral NMN undergoes extensive
first-pass metabolism in the gut, with partial conversion to NAM prior to entering
systemic circulation.
1.3 Aging and NAD+ In rodent models, NAD+ levels frequently decline as the animals get
older. Some evidence indicates that NAD+ turnover may be elevated in aging rodents,
suggesting a higher rate of NAD+ consumption. However, equivalent tracer studies have not
yet been conducted in humans.
1.4 Need for Human Tracer Studies These compounds are being investigated for the
prevention and treatment of age-related diseases. There is a need to clarify how they are
absorbed and how exactly they elevate NAD+ in different tissues. Using stable
isotope-labeled NMN and NAM will help map the flux from oral precursors into blood,
muscle, urine, and stool, and will also reveal how aging influences NAD+ turnover.
- Aims and Objectives
Aim 1: Use stable isotope tracers and mass spectrometry in healthy young adults to track
how orally administered NMN or NAM are metabolized, how they enter NAD+ pools, and how
much is excreted or converted to other metabolites.
Aim 2: Compare these same fluxes in older adults (≥65 years). Investigators specifically
want to see whether age alters the metabolic route from precursor to NAD+ and whether
older adults exhibit higher consumption (turnover) of NAD+.
- Study Design
3.1 Overview Single-center trial at Brigham and Women's Hospital.
Groups: Two main groups of participants:
Group A (NMN group): 16 participants (8 young adults aged 18-40; 8 older adults aged
≥65).
Group B (NAM group): 16 participants (8 young; 8 older). Each participant takes either
NMN or NAM orally for 14 days. The study uses stable isotopes (non-radioactive) to label
NMN or NAM in order to track how these molecules appear in NAD+ and its downstream
metabolites.
3.2 Treatment Duration Participants receive daily doses of their assigned treatment (NMN
or NAM) for 14 days. Detailed sampling done on Days 1 and 14.
3.3 Dosage NMN: 1000 mg once daily (four 250 mg capsules). NAM: 370 mg once daily. On
Days 1 and 14, the entire oral dose is fully labeled with stable isotopes; on the
intermediate days (2-13), the product is unlabeled.
3.4 Key Assessments Blood draws at multiple time points (e.g., pre-dose, 30 min, 1 hr, 2
hr, 4 hr, 8 hr) on Days 1 and 14.
Muscle biopsies of the vastus lateralis (Days 1 and 14, typically ~6-8 hours after dose)
to determine how much labeled precursor appears in muscle NAD+ pools.
Timed Collection of urine and stool on Days 1-2 and 14-15 to see how the precursor or
NAD+ metabolites are excreted and to characterize gut microbiome (which can influence
NAD+ precursor metabolism and may be affected by NMN or NAM).
- Endpoints
Primary Endpoints (for NMN group) Fraction of peripheral blood NAD+ containing the stable
isotope labelled tracer
Primary Endpoints (for NAM group) Fraction of peripheral blood NAD+ containing the stable
isotope labelled tracer
- Study Procedures Screening Phase (up to 4 weeks before Day 1) Medical history,
demographics, laboratory tests (CBC, chemistry, A1C), physical exam, and EKG if
indicated.
Confirm eligibility. Intervention Phase (Days 1-14)
Day 1:
Collect baseline blood samples and muscle biopsy. Blood draws at multiple time points
(e.g., pre-dose, 30 min, 1 hr, 2 hr, 4 hr, 8 hr).
Administer stable-isotope-labeled product (NMN or NAM) at time 0. Repeat blood draws at
specified intervals. Collect urine and stool.
Day 2:
Additional blood draws. Begin taking unlabeled study product daily at home.
Days 3, 5, 8:
Short visits for blood sampling, vital signs, adherence check.
Day 14:
Collect baseline blood samples and muscle biopsy. Blood draws at multiple time points
(e.g., pre-dose, 30 min, 1 hr, 2 hr, 4 hr, 8 hr).
Administer stable-isotope-labeled product (NMN or NAM) at time 0. Collect urine and
stool.
Day 15:
Unlabeled Treatment (NAM or NMN) administration. Follow-up blood draws.
Follow-up Phase:
Days 16, 43:
Final safety labs, check for adverse events, measure any labeled/unlabeled NAD+ or
metabolites that might linger.
- Risks and Safety
Drug Safety:
Previous Phase 1 trials show 1000 mg NMN up to twice daily is safe and well-tolerated,
with no serious drug-related adverse events.
NAM is generally recognized as safe at these doses. High-dose niacin can cause flushing,
GI disturbance, or liver enzyme elevations, but those have not been seen with NMN or NAM.
Muscle Biopsy:
Potential for temporary discomfort, bruising, or rare infection at the biopsy site. The
team will use local anesthetic and standard sterile technique.
Blood Draws:
Common risks include transient pain or bruising, and rarely infection.
Urine and Stool Collection:
Main risk is inconvenience and mild discomfort; no significant medical risk from the
collection itself.
Adverse Events Reporting:
The protocol specifies regular monitoring and reporting. A Safety Review Committee (SRC)
meets every six months.
- Statistical Analysis
Primary Analyses:
Quantify the fraction of labeled NAD+ vs. unlabeled in blood, PBMCs, muscle, urine, and
stool.
Compare young vs. older adults to see whether aging shifts the route or magnitude of NAD+
precursor metabolism.
Models:
Mixed-model repeated measures (MMRM) or ANCOVA with factors for age, sex, and baseline
values.
Sample Size:
16 subjects per arm (8 young + 8 older in NMN group; 8 young + 8 older in NAM group) is
based on pilot data and the specialized nature of stable-isotope tracing.
- Study Conduct and Logistics
Randomization:
1:1 ratio to NMN vs. NAM, block-randomized, stratified by age group.
Blinding:
The protocol is an open-label comparison of two labeled precursors.
Data Management:
Electronic CRFs, redcap database, verification by investigators.
Monitoring:
Internal team plus sponsor oversight.
Ethical Considerations:
IRB approval, informed consent detailing objectives, procedures, and risks. Emphasis on
ensuring participant safety.
- Importance and Potential Impact
The protocol addresses critical gaps in knowledge like how orally ingested NAD+
precursors (NMN, NAM) become NAD+ in human tissues.
Results will inform whether older adults have distinctly higher NAD+ turnover and might
respond differently to NAD+ augmentation.
Findings could shape clinical dosing recommendations for NMN/NAM in therapeutic or
preventive settings related to aging and metabolic health.