Mini-MARVEL - Mitochondrial Antioxidant Therapy in Ulcerative Colitis
NCT ID: NCT05539625
Last Updated: 2026-01-09
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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WITHDRAWN
PHASE2
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-09-01
2026-10-31
Brief Summary
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MitoQ has been shown to be safe in 2 large human clinical studies in Parkinson's disease and Hepatitis C, but the Mini-MARVEL study, starting alongside the adult MARVEL study, will be the first study in UC in children and young people. At low doses, MitoQ is used as a nutritional supplement that has an anti-oxidant effect. Currently, many drug treatments in UC are very strong, expensive and aimed at suppressing the immune system. Steroid courses are often needed but these have lots of adverse events in children and young people and are strongly disliked by many. If the Mini- MARVEL study provides supportive data on feasibility, including where we have to concentrate our efforts to include enough children and young people through to study end, we could design a full-scale trial to see if MitoQ can be a safe and cost-effective new treatment that works at blocking the specific inflammatory signal found in the gut lining of children and young people with UC.
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Detailed Description
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Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
OTHER
QUADRUPLE
Study Groups
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MitoQ
Once daily dosing of two capsules for 40mg/d (or one capsule for 20mg/d if weight \<30kgs)
MitoQ
MitoQ in inflammation: In the experimental setting, MitoQ has been extensively studied with clear mode of action on inflammatory mechanisms relevant to IBD:
MitoQ can limit the damage to mitochondria caused by mitochondrial ROS and thereby reducing the leak and oxidisation of mtDNA that are critical to its pro-inflammatory actions within the cell.
MitoQ reduces the inflammatory potential of mitochondrial DNA which have escaped or released from dying inflammatory cells.
MitoQ can influence how the immune cells generate their energy, diverting it away from a more inflammatory type of metabolism (glycolysis) MitoQ can induce autophagy, a cellular recycling mechanism that removes damaged mitochondria. Defective autophagy is heavily implicated in the pathogenesis of IBD.
Hence collectively, MitoQ acts upstream of several pro-inflammatory mechanisms with the net effect to promote resolution of inflammation and mucosal healing.
Placebo
Participants will take an oral matched placebo daily
Placebo
Placebo
Interventions
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MitoQ
MitoQ in inflammation: In the experimental setting, MitoQ has been extensively studied with clear mode of action on inflammatory mechanisms relevant to IBD:
MitoQ can limit the damage to mitochondria caused by mitochondrial ROS and thereby reducing the leak and oxidisation of mtDNA that are critical to its pro-inflammatory actions within the cell.
MitoQ reduces the inflammatory potential of mitochondrial DNA which have escaped or released from dying inflammatory cells.
MitoQ can influence how the immune cells generate their energy, diverting it away from a more inflammatory type of metabolism (glycolysis) MitoQ can induce autophagy, a cellular recycling mechanism that removes damaged mitochondria. Defective autophagy is heavily implicated in the pathogenesis of IBD.
Hence collectively, MitoQ acts upstream of several pro-inflammatory mechanisms with the net effect to promote resolution of inflammation and mucosal healing.
Placebo
Placebo
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Able and willing to give informed consent if aged 16-17 years of age; parents or guardian able and willing to give informed consent if a child of age 15 years and under
* Confirmed UC as documented in the medical notes
* Mild-moderate severity (PUCAI score 10-55)
* (i) If Incident (newly diagnosed) case (biopsy confirmation of suspected UC at endoscopy) or within 2 weeks of diagnosis - no anti-inflammatory medication or if started on 5-ASA on day of endoscopy for presumed UC (ii) If Prevalent case - No medication or stable dose of existing medicine (oral/topical 5-ASA for \>2 weeks at screening; thiopurine for \>4 weeks at screening)
Exclusion Criteria
* Young person (16-17 years of age) with inability to provide consent due to a lack of capacity
* Crohn's disease (CD) or IBD unclassified (IBDU) as documented in the medical notes
* Evidence of acute severe UC (ASUC) - ASUC is a medical emergency in children and young people with UC who are clinically unwell with marked diarrhoea, haematochezia and abdominal pain, and by definition have a paediatric UC activity index (PUCAI) score of at least 65 points
* Physician judgement that the subject is likely to require hospitalisation for medical care or surgical intervention of any kind for UC (e.g. colectomy) within 12 weeks of baseline
* Evidence of current (or previous in last 12 months) toxic megacolon (using defined paediatric criteria - radiographic evidence of transverse colon diameter ≥56 mm (or \>40mm in those \<10 years) PLUS evidence of systemic toxicity (such as: fever \>38 degrees Celsius, tachycardia (heart rate \>2 SD above mean for age), dehydration, electrolyte disturbance (sodium, potassium or chloride), altered level of consciousness, coma, hypotension or shock) or bowel perforation
* Infective colitis in UC (C\&S, C. difficile toxin positive or virology at screening)
* Proctitis (inflammation confined to the rectum, with no proximal extension to the sigmoid) for incident cases after colonoscopy or prevalent cases at most recent colonoscopy
* UC with Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis (PSC) - PSC is a chronic disease characterized by inflammation and scarring of the bile ducts resulting in strictures of the biliary tree; most cases in children are associated with IBD. The diagnosis is made by liver imaging with MRI/MRCP.
* Age \<18 years but in adult IBD service
* Intravenous corticosteroids for treatment of colitis within 8 weeks of screening
* Current or previous exposure to tacrolimus, cyclosporin, or mycophenolate,
* Current or previous exposure to biological therapy (anti-TNF, vedolizumab or ustekinumab) and oral JAK-inhibitors (tofacitinib)
* Subjects with current barriers in language or communication that in the judgement of local PI will impede the completion of the trial.
* Female patient with child-bearing potential who does not wish to use a medically acceptable method of contraception throughout the treatment period and for 1 month after discontinuation of treatment. (Appropriate methods of contraception include IUD, oral contraceptive, subdermal implant and double barrier (condom with a contraceptive sponge or contraceptive pessary)
* Pregnancy (current declared or positive urine pregnancy test) or attempting to become pregnant during trial period) or breastfeeding
* A history of overdose, or significant active mental health problems.
* Monogenic IBD (an autosomal condition with an IBD-like phenotype; most common in those with IBD diagnosed \<2 years of age)
* Subjects with current - or recent history of - severe, progressive, or uncontrolled renal, hepatic, haematological, gastrointestinal, metabolic (including uncontrolled hypercholesterolemia), endocrine, pulmonary, cardiac, neurological disease
* Subjects with a known allergy/contraindication to MitoQ.
* Subjects currently taking any products containing Mitoquinol mesylate (Coenzyme Q10) or any products containing Coenzyme derivatives such as Coenzyme A (CoA, SCoA, CoASH). If subjects are on these products, they can enter the trial after a 7-day washout period.
6 Years
17 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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The Jon Moulton Charity Trust
UNKNOWN
MitoQ
UNKNOWN
University of Edinburgh
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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NHS Lothian
Edinburgh, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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AC21067
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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