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A Trial of Taurine Supplementation in Parenteral Nutrition 1

L

London North West Healthcare NHS Trust

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Cholestasis

Treatments

Procedure: intravenous taurine in nutritional supplement

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT00135044
Taurine05

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to investigate whether the inclusion of 1g of intravenous taurine as part of the nitrogen source of parenteral nutrition reduces parenteral nutrition associated cholestatic liver disease, a common side effect of parenteral nutrition.

Full description

Parenteral nutrition associated cholestasis (PNAC) is one of the main causes of death during long-term home parenteral nutrition (HPN). In one study 65% of patients on NPN developed PNAC after a median of 6 months and 41.5% developed HPN associated liver disease after a median of 17 months. It is thought that this condition develops due to changes in bile acid conjugation. Bile acids are conjugated with either taurine or glycine before their secretion in bile. Man obtains taurine mostly from the diet and hepatic taurine conjugation of bile acids accounts for 30-40% of the total bile acid pool. Taurine-conjugated bile acids are more water soluble and less toxic than glycine-conjugated bile acids. The ratio of glycine to taurine conjugated bile acids appears to be important and studies in rats have found that the bile acid sulfolithocholate, which is conjugated with glycine, was cholestatic while the taurine conjugated was not. Further studies in guinea pigs have shown that dietary taurine supplements prevent the cholestasis induced by sulfolithocholate by increasing the percentage of taurine conjugated bile acids. Patients on intravenous nutrition with intestinal failure may not re-absorb bile acids normally and may have increased losses of taurine conjugated of bile acids. They have also been found to have low levels of taurine. It is thought that chronic taurine deficiency, by altering the pattern of conjugation of bile acids, may predispose to cholestasis and ultimately severe hepatic dysfunction. In a study of hepatobiliary surgical patients given dietary taurine post operatively, there was enhanced conjugation and secretion of bile acids. Bilirubin levels fell during taurine supplementation compared to patients not receiving taurine although this was not significant. We are going to investigate if parenteral taurine supplementation is beneficial in our patients experiencing this condition.

Enrollment

24 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Chronic intestinal failure (CIF) patients on long term home parenteral nutrition, under the care of the Nutrition and Intestinal Failure Clinic at St Mark's, who have PNAC.
  • Must be over 18
  • On HPN for 6 months and stable
  • Life expectancy of over 12 months
  • HPN should provide > 75-80% of estimated nutritional requirements
  • Should be on HPN for 5 or more days per week

Exclusion criteria

  • No consent.
  • Pregnancy/lactation.
  • Planned surgery.
  • Renal failure.
  • Hepatitic failure, ultrasound proven fibrosis or cirrhosis, poorly controlled diabetes, hepatitis B or C, autoimmune liver disease, receiving > 40 kcal/kg/day from HPN, current sepsis, co-existing surgical complications such as intestinal obstruction, hepatotoxic drugs, primary liver cancer or metastases or any other cause for pre and post hepatic jaundice.

Inability to adhere to the protocol.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Alison Culkin; Simon Gabe, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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