Calcium-D-Glucarate

Last Updated: September 28, 2022

Calcium-D-Glucarate is a β-glucuronidase inhibitor that promotes the excretion of any molecule in a specific detoxification pathway. It has shown efficacy at very high (impractical) oral doses in reducing cancer induced by these compounds, but may also reduce all steroid hormones as well.

dosageDosage

Calcium-D-Glucarate is most often used for

Summary

For the most part, Calcium-D-Glucarate is just known to be a β-glucuronidase inhibitor via its metabolite D-glucaro-1,4-lactone. The process of 'glucuronidation' is a detoxification process where a group (known as a glucuronide) is attached to a hydrophobic molecule to make it more water soluble, and then the kidneys can better facilitate its removal from the body. This process is positively mediated by the glucuronosyltransferase enzyme, and negatively mediated by the β-glucuronidase enzyme; as such, inhibiting the negative regulator (the enzyme that removes the glucuronide) indirectly increases the activity of this pathway.

It is touted to be an anticancer agent, which is due to a series of past research done in rats and mice exposed to the DMBA toxin which is known to be glucuronidated. There are definitely anticancer effects in these models, and it appears to extend to other toxins that are glucuronidated.

However, a problem occurs when humans take this as an oral supplement. Although it appears to be safe even at high doses, very high doses are required for its effects (100mg/kg minimum, near maximal effects at 200mg/kg) and this would even only theoretically assure some protection against toxins that are glucuronidated. If a toxin can't be glucuronidated and requires another detoxification pathway, it will serve no benefit.

Organ cancer production which just occurs spontaneously because of oxidative stress to DNA is also not likely to be protected against, as increasing glucuronidation does not per se decrease oxidative stress in the body (it might just reduce the oxidative effects of toxins).

Furthermore, all steroid hormones in the body (testosterone, estrogen, DHEA, etc.) are also glucuronidated. If using an oral dose that reduces the toxin, these hormones will also all be reduced for a short time.

Using calcium-D-glucarate as a daily preventative supplement does not appear to be a prudent idea, due to its lack of reliability even in theory and high doses used. However, a single acute dose of this supplement prior to known exposure to toxins that are glucuronidated (such as both benzopyrene and polyaromatic hydrocarbon compounds produced in the cooking of meat products) might be more prudent and potentially useful.

What else is Calcium-D-Glucarate known as?
Note that Calcium-D-Glucarate is also known as:
  • Calcium Glucarate
  • Saccharic acid
  • Calcium-D-Saccharate
  • Glucaric acid
Calcium-D-Glucarate should not be confused with:
  • Calcium (individual ion)
  • Glucuronolactone (sounds similar to the metabolite D-glucaro-1
  • 4-lactone)
  • Glutamine (not glucaric acid)
  • Saccharin (not saccharic acid)
Dosage information

The recommended dosage range (from supplement providers) is in the range of 1,500-3,000mg daily. Based on animal research, this does appear to be quite low and a minimum of 200mg/kg for humans may be needed to replicate the research (also based further on animal research, a 200mg/kg human dose is around the point where dose-dependent returns attenuate greatly and is the 'ideal' dose, below this dosage is a linear drop in efficacy with 100mg/kg being half as effective)

At this moment in time, it may be prudent to only used calcium-D-glucarate at a 100-200mg/kg dosage prior to known exposure to toxins that are glucuronidated; it may not be financially prudent to take it as a daily preventative supplement.

Don't miss out on the latest research

Research Breakdown

🚧 Under Renovation 🚧

The information in this section is slated for renovation — it will soon be transformed into a more usable (and readable!) form in the coming months. As such, the text in this section may be out of date and not up to Examine’s current standards for writing style.