Advanced Metagenomic Analysis of Human Colonic Microbiota in Patients With Chronic GI Disorders
NCT ID: NCT01099111
Last Updated: 2014-05-22
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
225 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2010-07-31
2012-03-31
Brief Summary
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Hence, aims to study the spectrum of such microbiota in these patients as compared to normal subjects, by utilizing metagenomic techniques rather than cultural methods.
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Detailed Description
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Many of the gastrointestinal or even other diseases (metabolic as in obesity, or autoimmune as in allergies) involve primarily the human gut microbiota and then according to specific changes in microbiota equilibrium certain effects occur on either bowel motility (as in irritable bowel syndrome: IBS), homeostasis of the GI immune system (as in inflammatory bowel disease: IBD), or mucosal cells proliferation (as in adenoma - colorectal cancer: CRC). These chronic diseases affect all nations worldwide and represent a significant public health burden. They can be seen among children, adolescents, and adults. Currently there is no medical cure for IBS, IBD or CRC once they develop.
The complex interactions between microbial, genetic, immune, and environmental factors seem to play an important role in the pathogenesis of IBS, IBD and CRC. Lately, post infectious - IBS have gained increasing focus, to the extent that whole pathogenesis of IBS might be attributed to a specific triggering factor of microbiota imbalance. The prevailing theory is that IBD is related to an altered mucosal barrier with a deregulated immune response directed against specific modifications in the normal microbiota leading to the alteration of its equilibrium. The etiology of IBD can therefore be conceptualized as an aberrant immunologic response to a modified component or components of the gut microbiota potentially following an environmental insult. Likewise, CRC development process from normal mucosal surface to adenoma and finally to CRC; is probably related to gut microbiota.
The prevalence of these diseases has been documented to go through an obvious increase in Saudi Arabia during the last 3 decades. This would represent a unique model to study the role of GIT microbiota or their metagenomics and their modifications in response to environmental or dietary factors in this community that went into urbanization fairly recently, and then analyze their causative relations to the focus diseases.
Here, we propose to perform a comprehensive analysis of the gastrointestinal tract microbiota and its contribution on gut homeostasis in normal subjects and patients with IBS, IBD and CRC by using state of the art metagenomics technology. This will be done on a Saudi population sample that we believe represent a unique model.
Our specific objectives for this project are:
* Characterize the microbiota composition (microbes and virus) of the mucosa from Saudi patients with IBS, IBD and CRC.
* Characterize the mobile GI metagenomics of Saudi patients with IBS, IBD and CRC.
* Compare the metagenomics of IBS, IBD and CRC patients to each other and to normal subjects from the same population.
Expected outcomes and Significance of research:
Altogether, the results from aims 1 and 2 will provide for the first time a comprehensive and in-depth analysis of the mucosa-associated microbiota of adult patients with IBS, IBD and CRC in Saudi population. The proposed study will define a microbiota "fingerprint" for Saudi norms, IBS, IBD and CRC. The contribution of virome and the mobile metagenome into these diseases development and/or health maintenance will be assessed for the first time and thus has the potential to reveal new paradigms. In addition, the study of the virome and mobile metagenome will help us to understand the selective forces that could contribute to the alteration and evolution of the microbiota community and thus could have important implications for the treatment of the diseases. Certainly, the work proposed here will pave the way toward future hypothesis-driven research which could lead to the design of therapeutic strategies aimed at manipulating the microbial community.
Conditions
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
CROSS_SECTIONAL
Study Groups
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome
only one Colonoscopy with mucosal washing samples collection at the time of recruitment
No interventions assigned to this group
Ulcerative Colitis
only one Colonoscopy with mucosal washing samples collection at the time of recruitment
No interventions assigned to this group
Crohn's Disease
only one Colonoscopy with mucosal washing samples collection at the time of recruitment
No interventions assigned to this group
Colo Rectal Cancer
only one Colonoscopy with mucosal washing samples collection at the time of recruitment
No interventions assigned to this group
Control: Normal Subjects
only one Colonoscopy with mucosal washing samples collection at the time of recruitment
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
1. Meet the diagnostic criteria as per ROME-II classification and as judged by experienced consultants for not less than 5 years.
2. IBS with diarrhea or constipation or mixed predominance pattern will be included.
3. Standard diagnostic tests have to be done to exclude any possible organic lesion to explain the abdominal pain, and all have to be negative.
IBD: from the KFMC GI service database, 50 Ulcerative Colitis (UC) and 50 Crohn's Disease (CD) will be selected according to following:
1. Confirmed diagnosis as CD or UC based on clinical, endoscopic and histological criteria.
2. Specifically did not use antibiotics for last 6 months before enrollment.
3. Detailed information about current treatment regimen has to be provided, and current use of 5-ASA, Steroid or Azathioprine will not hold from enrolling the patients as we cannot have patients off any one or more of these medications. (Obviously, we cannot exclude effects of these medications on microbiota, but it is not the focus of the current study).
4. None of the patients selected would be on anti-TNF medications.
CRC: 50 consecutive cases of confirmed CRC as per histological diagnosis made by 2 experienced pathologists will be included. Feasibility to do full colonoscopy before any surgical resection would be a condition to recruit any patient.
Normal Subjects: 50 normal control groups that are matched for age and sex to the other 3 disease groups will be selected from consecutive CRC screening colonoscopy subjects who get referred to KFMC GI service during the study period, and proved to have no GI disorders. 25 will be selected from Urban and 25 from Rural areas of KSA.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Absence of recent infective colitis, bowel obstruction, or colonic/small intestinal resection surgery.
3. Not on any medication that may affect gut microbiota, like: cholestyramine, ursodeoxycholic acid, gut prokinetic agents.
4. Refusal to comply with the unified bowel preparation instructions for all cases.
16 Years
70 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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King AbdulAziz City for Science and Technology
OTHER
King Fahad Medical City
OTHER_GOV
Responsible Party
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Ahmed Al Omair
Head, GI section + GI Consultant
Principal Investigators
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Ahmed O AlOmair, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
KFMC
Ali Al Shanqeeti, MD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
KACST
Locations
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KFMC
Riyadh, Riyadh Region, Saudi Arabia
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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243 - 29 - AT
Identifier Type: OTHER_GRANT
Identifier Source: secondary_id
09 -116
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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