Muhammad Asif, Syed Ali Raza, Muhammad Kamran Khan et al.
Food Science & Nutrition (Wiley) • Apr 16, 2025
Moringa Research
MoringaBase has indexed 6 studies examining moringa and anticancer activity. Overall the evidence is early-stage, and moringa is not a proven treatment. Below, every study is scored for quality so you can weigh the findings yourself.
6
Studies indexed
0
Randomised / controlled trials
36/100
Avg. quality score
Muhammad Asif, Syed Ali Raza, Muhammad Kamran Khan et al.
Food Science & Nutrition (Wiley) • Apr 16, 2025
Anaya-Esparza L.M., Villagrán-de la Mora Z., Ruvalcaba-Gómez J.M. et al.
F1000Research • Jan 30, 2025
Biomedicines (MDPI) • Mar 5, 2025
Fatiha RA, Ngabdi CK, Azizah JS et al.
Asian Pacific journal of cancer prevention : APJCP • Mar 1, 2026
Al-Rasheed N.M., Al-Otaibi M.M., Krychowiak M. et al.
Frontiers in Immunology • Jun 5, 2025
Abd Alkader Alabrahim O, Maher Abdeldayem A, Azzazy HME
Nanoscale advances • Mar 17, 2026
Doses vary by study and moringa preparation. As one example from the indexed research: Variable across studies - dosages ranged from 500mg to 3000mg daily depending on preparation and application, with most studies using 1000-2000mg daily of leaf extract or powder
Study dosages are not dosing advice. Talk to a healthcare professional before taking moringa.
MoringaBase has indexed 6 studies examining moringa and anticancer activity, including 0 randomised controlled trials and 3 systematic reviews or meta-analyses. Each study is scored 0–100 for evidence quality based on design, sample size, blinding, duration, publication quality, and replication.
The studies indexed for this topic carry an average quality score of 36/100. Higher scores reflect stronger designs (randomised, blinded, larger samples); lower scores indicate preliminary or early-stage evidence. Always read the individual study scores rather than relying on an average alone.
No. Most moringa research is preliminary, and indexed evidence describes associations or effects observed in specific study conditions — not proof that moringa treats, cures, or prevents any condition. Talk to a qualified healthcare professional before using moringa for a health concern.
Doses differ across studies. As one example from the indexed research: Variable across studies - dosages ranged from 500mg to 3000mg daily depending on preparation and application, with most studies using 1000-2000mg daily of leaf extract or powder. Study dosages are not dosing advice — appropriate amounts depend on the individual and should be discussed with a healthcare professional.
Moringa leaf is widely consumed as a food, but supplements can interact with medications and aren't suitable for everyone (for example during pregnancy). This page summarises research, not safety guidance — consult a healthcare professional or pharmacist before starting moringa.
The evidence spans randomised controlled trials, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, cohort studies, case reports, and laboratory (in vitro) and animal research. Study type heavily influences the quality score, because human randomised trials carry far more weight than lab studies.
Every study card links to a full breakdown with its quality score, plain-language summary, and a link to the original paper (DOI or PubMed where available) so you can verify the source directly. Browse them below or in the full research database.
Cancer cell growth inhibition and chemopreventive activity.