Mother-to-Infant Transfer of Bacteriome, Fungome, Virome, and Metabolome in Health and Crohn's Disease
NCT ID: NCT05112497
Last Updated: 2024-08-26
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
480 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2020-06-10
2025-08-10
Brief Summary
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Given the complexity of microbes present in the gestational gut, it will be exciting to learn whether there are other modules of priming induced by distinct microbes and their metabolites. Along these lines, it is tempting to speculate that this transgenerational effect represents a predictive adaptive response whereby mothers prepare the neonates for specific challenges that they are likely to encounter based on gestational environmental cues, not only by microbial colonisation but also by metabolite transfer. Meanwhile, it is unknown whether there are abnormalities in the metabolome and its mother-to-infant transfer in IBD. Those results indicate that the metabolomic profiles are altered in IBD mother's breast milk, which may transfer to infants and influence their development and health.
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Detailed Description
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A recent study discovered a novel mechanism of vertically transmitted protection of the new-born. The researchers found that bacteria in the mother's intestine during gestation can drive later innate maturation of the neonatal gut in the absence of colonization, through the transfer of specific bacterial metabolites to the foetus and via mother's milk \[8\]. Gomez de Agu ero et al. (2016) clearly demonstrated that the effects of the gut microbiota on postnatal immune maturation are not simply due to colonization of the new-born after birth\[9\]. They show this in a simplified model of gestational monocolonization with E. coli whereby AhR ligands derived from this bacterium drive a distinct early postnatal intestinal developmental program\[9\]. Given the complexity of microbes present in the gestational gut, it will be exciting to learn whether there are other modules of priming induced by distinct microbes and their metabolites. Along these lines, it is tempting to speculate that this transgenerational effect represents a predictive adaptive response whereby mothers prepare the neonates for specific challenges that they are likely to encounter based on gestational environmental cues, not only by microbial colonisation but also by metabolite transfer. Meanwhile, it is unknown regarding whether there are abnormalities in the metabolome as well as its mother-to-infant transfer in IBD. To address this question, we began with a pilot study on breast milk metablome profiling, employing untargeted metabolomics approach by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS). The results showed a total of 1,318 Negative-mode features and 1,418 Positive features discriminatory between IBD (4UC, 3 CD) mothers and healthy mothers, indicative of broad metabolic differences between them. Those significantly changed metabolites were involved in arginine and proline metabolism as well as tyrosine metabolism according to pathway enrichment analysis. Those results indicate that the metabolomic profiles are altered in IBD mother's breast milk, which may transfer to infants and influence their development and health.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Crohn's Disease
1. Pregnant CD patients
2. Newborn of pregnant CD patients
3. Father of the newborn
4. Non-pregnant CD women
No intervention procedure
No intervention procedure
Healthy Control
1. Pregnant women without CD
2. Newborn of pregnant women without CD
3. Father of the newborn
No intervention procedure
No intervention procedure
Interventions
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No intervention procedure
No intervention procedure
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Diagnosis of Crohn's disease is confirmed by clinical, endoscopic, radiological and histological features
* All eligible should sign the consent form
* To be pregnant in the 1st trimester or planning pregnancy
* Subjects without a diagnosis of IBD
* All eligible should sign the consent form
* Diagnosis of Crohn's disease is confirmed by clinical, endoscopic, radiological and histological features
* All eligible should sign the consent form
Exclusion Criteria
* Inability to give informed consent
* Probiotics. prebiotics and antibiotics use in the past 3 months
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University
OTHER
First People's Hospital of Foshan
OTHER
Chinese University of Hong Kong
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Siew Chien NG
Professor
Principal Investigators
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Siew Chien Ng, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Locations
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Prince of Wales Hospital
Hong Kong, , Hong Kong
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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MoMmy-CD
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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