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proof-of-concept study to adequately design a larger trial to investigate the effect of supplementation of a probiotic (SLAB51) on AD biomarker.
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BACKGROUND: A growing body of evidence suggests an effect of gut bacteria and their metabolites on brain health, including the development of neurodegenerative conditions and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Probiotic supplementation is commonplace in medicine but targeting the gut microbiome to prevent AD is poorly understood and little is known on the dynamic effects of probiotics on physiology.
AIM: This is a proof-of-concept study to adequately design a larger trial to investigate the effect of supplementation of a probiotic (SLAB51) on AD biomarker. The study will use a high frequency sampling to closely monitor the physiological dynamics as the result of low and high dose consumption of the probiotic.
METHODS: Study subjects will be three patients with prodromal AD between 60 and 80 years old and carrying the apolipoprotein E (APOE) e4 allele. Participants will sequentially receive no supplement (run-in), low and high doses of probiotics for five consecutive days with a washout period in-between. Blood and stools will be collected every day or every second days. The main readout will be the established plasma markers of AD, and more exploratory analysis will be performed on putative mediators of the gut-brain axis.
EXPECTED OUTCOME: Curves of dynamic change of the readouts will be built for each subject, and a model of the response will be estimated. The results of this project will help design a larger trial to identify the most promising analytes showing a dynamic response to probiotic consumption and better understand the link to the pathology.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Antibiotic consumption 1 month prior the intervention
Prebiotic consumption 1 month prior the intervention
Recent change in diet habit (eg: vegetarian, vegan, high protein diet)
Current alcohol addiction
Current smoking habit
Clinical diagnosis of dementia.
Contraindications to probiotic consumption
Inability to undergo the procedures of the study, e.g., severe behavioural disturbances.
severe diseases:
The participation to a clinical trial involving potential Alzheimer's disease modifying therapies.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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3 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Claire Chevalier, PhD; Giovanni B Frisoni, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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