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Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality and contribute most to healthcare costs in the U.S. Age is the strongest cardiovascular disease risk factor, with >90% of all deaths from cardiovascular disease occurring in adults >50 years old. The age-associated increased risk of cardiovascular disease is due, in large part, to the development of arterial dysfunction, including endothelial dysfunction and stiffening of the large elastic arteries. Therefore, novel, effective interventions that improve arterial function will have a large public health impact by decreasing the risk of cardiovascular diseases.
The short-chain fatty acid acetate is endogenously produced by the gut microbiome from fermentation of dietary soluble fiber. High-fiber diets reduce risk of cardiovascular diseases, but unfortunately, a low percentage of Americans meet guidelines for adequate dietary fiber intake and, despite nationwide efforts to improve this, trends in fiber intake have not improved over the last 20+ years. Thus, directly supplementing acetate may be a more practical and feasible intervention for effectively improving arterial function in older adults and reducing the risk of cardiovascular diseases.
The investigators will conduct a study to determine the efficacy of 12 weeks of oral supplementation with acetate for improving arterial function in late middle-aged and older (50+ years) adults. They will also assess the safety and tolerability of acetate supplementation in these adults and perform innovative mechanistic analyses to determine how acetate supplementation improves arterial function. The investigators hypothesize that oral acetate supplementation will improve arterial function by decreasing oxidative stress and increasing nitric oxide bioavailability, and also hypothesize that acetate supplementation will be safe and promote high rates of adherence.
Full description
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel design clinical trial to assess the efficacy of 12 weeks of oral acetate supplementation for improving arterial function in late middle-aged and older (MA/O) adults (50+ years). The primary outcome is brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMDba), the gold-standard measure of endothelial function in humans (hypothesis: FMDba will be improved by acetate). The secondary outcome is carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (CFPWV), the gold-standard measure of large elastic artery stiffness in humans (hypothesis: CFPWV will be reduced by acetate). Various other outcomes will also be measured. All measures will be assessed before and after 12-weeks of supplementation with 4,000 mg/day calcium acetate or placebo.
Visit 2:
Visit 4:
Visits 4-5: Check-in visits (after 2, 4, and 8 weeks on intervention)
After weeks 1, 6, and 10, the coordinator will check-in with subjects about any issues and treatment-emergent adverse events via phone call.
Post-Testing (Visits 7 & 8):
Intervention Duration and Study Sample Size: The expected duration for a participant to complete the entire protocol from screening to follow-up testing is 14-16 weeks. Based on our power analysis, 26 participants per group (acetate vs. placebo; 52 total) are needed to detect a significant difference in our primary outcome measure (FMDba). The investigators intend to enroll 66 subjects (33 per group) to allow for an ~20% dropout rate. Based on this, ~2-3 participants will be enrolled each month.
Data Collection and Analysis (including blinding): Collection of outcome measures data will be performed by the PI, Dr. Vienna Brunt, with the assistance of Amy Bazzoni (research coordinator), other professional research staff at the Clinical Vascular Physiology Core Laboratory and/or trainees within Dr. Brunt's lab. IV placement, blood draws and vascular endothelial cell collection will be performed by an experienced research nurse or nurse practitioner. Processing of endothelial cells and serum exposure experiments will be performed by professional research staff, under the direct supervision of the PI. Data analysis will be performed by Dr. Brunt and/or supervised professional/laboratory research staff. Having a single investigator perform all data collection and analysis will remove the potential for inter-investigator variation. Dr. Brunt will remain blinded throughout data collection and analysis.
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66 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Jill Herch, BS; Vienna Brunt, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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