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The aim of the study is to produce a tolerable alternative to normal wheat bread which would be suitable for subjects with self-reported non-coeliac gluten sensitivity (NCGS). The bread would be made from wheat so, in contrast to gluten-free bread, would be more comparable to standard bread. To make this bread, the investigators will use advanced enzyme technology and/or novel formulations to target the digestion or removal of wheat proteins, which might be involved in the etiology of non-coeliac gluten sensitivity, preferentially over other those that are more useful for baking quality. The investigators will determine palatability and tolerance of this new product in a human cross-over, randomised, blind and placebo-controlled intervention study.
It has been estimated 6-10% of the population are sensitive to gluten who do not have coeliac disease (CD). Three breads will be produced and tested in this study against a suitable reference based on standard wheat flour and baking process
Full description
Prior to the study each volunteer will undergo screening procedure (Health Screening Questionnaire) for compliance with the inclusion/exclusion criteria. The volunteers who meet those criteria will be invited to sign an informed consent. Following this the volunteers will be asked to complete:
It is anticipated that NCGS volunteers are following a low gluten or gluten-free life style. Evaluation of their dietary compliance with gluten-free diet will be done through using numerical scores (Biagi at al.,2009) - a system based on strategies that the subjects use to avoid eating gluten.
Gastrointestinal symptoms will be assessed by the participant completing daily diary cards via a 100-mm VAS to score the presence and severity of overall abdominal symptoms, abdominal pain, bloating, wind, satisfaction with stool consistency, tiredness, and nausea.
Severity of fatigue will be evaluated by the Daily-Fatigue Impact Scale (D-FIS), a questionnaire containing 8 items that evaluates the impact of fatigue on cognition, physical functioning, and daily activities.
After one week of a baseline period, the subjects will be assigned to one week of dietary intervention (bread A, B, C or D), followed by 14-day wash-out period before crossing over to the next bread. All volunteers will be randomised to all four groups/cross over intervention.
Treatment:
Each treatment bread will be consumed for one week (3 slices per day), followed by washout period of at least 2 weeks or until symptoms induced during the previous dietary challenge resolved. Volunteers unable to continue a treatment due to intolerable symptoms will be permitted to cease the study food of that particular arm but can continue if they wish with the study.
Bread will be provided to volunteers at the beginning of each treatment week. Compliance will be determined with questioning at time of review and counting the slices of bread left at the end of the treatment week.
Pilot study
For volunteers only recruited from the Aberdeen and the Aberdeenshire area as part of a pilot study we will also ask volunteers to make a single visit (at the beginning of the study) to the RINH. At this visit a fasting blood sample will be taken, the blood pressure will be checked and anthropometric measurements will be made.
Blood test:
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Medical exclusion criteria
Volunteers with poorly controlled psychiatric disease or those unable to give written informed consent will also be excluded.
Medication exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
40 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Nigel Dr Hoggard, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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