Noni Extract
Also known as: Morinda citrifolia, Indian mulberry, noni fruit extract, MFER-Mc, fermented noni extract
Effective Dosage
No established dose (insufficient research data)
What the Science Says
Noni is a tropical fruit (Morinda citrifolia) used in traditional medicine across the Pacific Islands. One small clinical trial found that a 600 mg dose reduced early postoperative nausea compared to placebo. A tiny 6-person case study in prostate cancer patients on active surveillance observed some gene expression changes and stable PSA levels after a year of supplementation, but this cannot establish effectiveness. Lab and animal studies suggest compounds in noni may have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and anticancer properties, but these findings have not been confirmed in human trials.
What It Doesn't Do
Not proven to treat or prevent cancer in humans — all cancer findings are from cell cultures or rats. No solid evidence it improves memory or brain health in people. Not a proven anti-aging or anti-wrinkle treatment in humans. Not a detox agent. The one human nausea trial was small and only showed benefit at the highest dose for a narrow 6-hour window.
Evidence-Based Benefits
One small RCT (n=100) found that 600 mg noni extract reduced early postoperative nausea incidence from 80% to 48% in high-risk patients during the first 6 hours post-surgery (PMID: 21294416). A very small case study (n=6) in low-risk prostate cancer patients on active surveillance reported stable PSA and gene expression changes after 12 months of supplementation, though no control group was used (PMID: 34661119). Pre-clinical and in vitro studies suggest potential anticancer, hepatoprotective, and memory-supporting properties via antioxidant, apoptotic, and cholinergic mechanisms, but these have not been validated in human trials (PMID: 23838966, 41614757, 25620570).
Weak EvidenceEffective at: No established dose (insufficient research data)
Source: auto-research
Absorption & Bioavailability
Unknown — no pharmacokinetic or absorption data provided in the available studies
Red Flags to Watch For
- Only one small randomized controlled trial in humans (100 patients, nausea only) — most other evidence is from cells or animals
- Cancer-related claims are based entirely on lab studies, not human trials — do not use as a cancer treatment
- The prostate cancer case study had only 6 participants with no control group — results cannot be generalized
- High doses used in some studies (6200 mg/day) far exceed typical supplement servings; safety at these doses is not well established
- Widely marketed with broad health claims (immunity, energy, anti-aging) that have no support in the provided research
Research Sources
- PubMed
- NIH DSLD
This information is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult a healthcare professional before starting any supplement regimen. Last updated: 2026-04-06