Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
40 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2017-04-11
2019-02-02
Brief Summary
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Aim: The aim of this study is to assess the role that the gut microbiota has on clinical disease expression in patients with mitochondrial disease.
Objectives: This is a feasibility study to assess:
1. How does clinical disease severity impact upon the gut microbiota in mitochondrial patients compared to healthy controls.
2. How diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for mitochondrial disease be improved.
Methods: This is a pilot study and is part of the Newcastle Mitochondrial Research Biobank. Stool samples will be collected from patients with a Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathy Lactic Acidosis and Stroke-like episodes (MELAS) phenotype carrier of the m.3243 A\>G mutation (N=20) from the United Kingdom Medical Research Council (MRC) Centre for Mitochondrial Disease Patient Cohort (RES/0211/7552, the largest cohort of mitochondrial patients in the world) and the mitochondrial clinic and age and gender matched healthy controls (N=20). DNA will be extracted from stool samples and the 16S rRNA gene (V4 region) will be sequenced. This data will be analysed using bioinformatics pipelines and computational biology.
Long Term Goal: To generate novel information relating to how the gut microbiota impacts upon clinical disease expression. This information could then be used to build a predictive model designed to optimise diagnosis and therapeutic treatments. This method also holds potential for use as a model for ageing and diseases associated with mitochondria not working properly, such as diabetes, cancer and Parkinson's disease. This research has the potential to reduce costs to the NHS and improve patient care and their quality of life.
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Detailed Description
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Rationale To date, there are few effective treatments for patients with mitochondrial disease and those available are predominantly supportive in nature with no proven treatment efficacy, and poor understanding of the links between the gut microbiota, mitochondrial disease, GI dysmotility and patient health and quality of life. Treatments include various antibiotics and laxatives which are generic and not disease specific. Long term effects of drugs are unknown and the impact these have on the GI tract and gut microbiota in mitochondrial disorders are currently unknown. It is essential to optimise supportive therapeutic strategies and design novel modalities to improve clinical management. Although advances in technology now provide more biological information than ever before, the complexity and volume of data generated exceeds the ability to analyse, interpret and translate this information back into the clinical management, highlighting the need to increase clinical analytical capabilities. The use of bioinformatics and computational biology to combine metagenomics data relating to the gut microbiota and metadata (patient characteristics; phenotype/genotype) is one approach to identify and predict what factors, such as drugs, phenotype and genotype, induce gut microbiota dysbiosis.
Elucidating the complexity and workings of the gut microbiota in mitochondrial disease provides a unique approach and deeper understanding of the biology in general, which is currently lacking in primary mitochondrial disorders. This research will contribute to the gut microbiome field and provide a novel insight into the complex microbe:microbe and microbiota-host interactions. The new insights generated here will provide the foundation for interventional studies aimed at manipulating the gut microbiome and relieving disease burden in patients with mitochondrial disease and potentially diseases associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, such as obesity, diabetes and neuro-degenerative disorders such as dementia and Parkinson's disease.
Objectives
The working hypotheses is that patients with mitochondrial disease experience GI dysmotility, and that the gut microbiota accentuates clinical disease severity. This study aims to provide novel information relating to:
1. How does clinical disease severity impact upon the gut microbiota in mitochondrial patients compared to healthy controls.
2. How diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for mitochondrial disease can be improved.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
CROSS_SECTIONAL
Study Groups
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Mitochondrial Disease Patients
* Male and Females \>18 years at the time of screening
* Patients must have proven genetic disease (confirmed by assessment of heteroplasmy in blood and urine samples) of the m.3243 A\>G mutation.
* Capacity to provide informed consent taken before any study related activities.
* Ability and willingness to adhere to the protocol, including all appointments.
* Ability to read and converse in English.
No interventions assigned to this group
Healthy Control Group
* Male and Females \>18 years at the time of screening
* Capacity to provide informed consent taken before any study related activities.
* Ability and willingness to adhere to the protocol, including all appointments.
* Ability to read and converse in English.
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Male and Females \>18 years at the time of screening
* Patients must have proven genetic disease (confirmed by assessment of heteroplasmy in blood and urine samples) of the m.3243 A\>G mutation.
* Capacity to provide informed consent taken before any study related activities.
* Ability and willingness to adhere to the protocol, including all appointments.
* Ability to read and converse in English.
Healthy Controls
* Male and Females \>18 years at the time of screening
* Capacity to provide informed consent taken before any study related activities.
* Ability and willingness to adhere to the protocol, including all appointments.
* Ability to read and converse in English.
Exclusion Criteria
* Abnormal clinical results as determined by physician.
* Patient without capacity to provide informed consent.
* Patient's unwillingness to adhere to the protocol, including all appointments.
* Language barriers preventing patients from reading and conversing in English.
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Newcastle-upon-Tyne Hospitals NHS Trust
OTHER
Newcastle University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Grainne Gorman, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Consultant Neurologist and Clinical Senior Lecturer
Locations
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Grainne Gorman
Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, United Kingdom
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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Version 1
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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