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OBJECTIVE: To gain mechanistic insights, we will compare effects of low fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides and monosaccharides and polyols (FODMAP) and high FODMAP diets on symptoms and colonic protease expression in patients with diarrhea predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D). We will measure how protease changes affect excitability of pain sensing neurons and correlate this with measurements of the metabolome and the microbiome.
DESIGN: We aim to perform a single blind prospective study of patients with diarrhea predominant IBS (Rome IV criteria) who will sequentially consume a high and low FODMAP diets, each for 3 weeks. Symptoms will be assessed using the IBS symptom severity scoring (IBS-SSS). Electrophysiological studies of changes in mouse dorsal root ganglia neurons in response to colonic mucosal/lamina propria supernatants will be carried out. Protease antagonist will be used to specifically assess protease expression. The metabolome will be evaluated using metabolic profiling in urine using mass spectrometry. Stool microbiota composition will be analysed by 16S rRNA gene profiling. All the above testing will be performed at 4 time points: at baseline, 3 weeks following a run-in period, after a 3-week-long high FODMAP diet, and after a 3-week-long low FODMAP diet period.
HYPOTHESIS: We anticipate that colonic tissue protease effects on the excitability of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons will increase with a high FODMAP diet and decrease with a low FODMAP diet, but that this may not be found in all patients. The magnitude of the effect may vary and this variation could be due to differences in the individual patients microbiome.
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Up to 15 % of adults in Western society suffer from irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and it is the second leading cause, behind the common cold, of workplace absenteeism. This proposal addresses critical knowledge gaps in our understanding of IBS mechanisms. What environmental triggers cause pain symptoms to chronically wax and wane? A fundamental observation is that over 70% of IBS patients report that meals trigger abdominal pain and diarrhea. Therefore, we examined the effects of a diet low in fermentable oligo, di, monosaccharides and polyols (FODMAPs) because up to 50-70% IBS patients reported improved symptoms on this diet (McIntosh et al 2016; Halmos et al 2014). We found that symptoms, particularly pain, were markedly improved in IBS patients on a low compared to a high FODMAP diet. Moreover, we found in a subset of patients evidence that FODMAPs activate intestinal mast cells, a major source of proteases and histamine, and their expression appears to be associated with IBS symptoms, although this remains to be proven. Thus, this diet provides a useful clinical tool to stimulate protease activity and study their actions. Sensitization (modulation of intracellular mechanisms leading to exaggerated action potential discharge in response to a given stimulus) of nociceptive dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons by tissue mediators is a fundamental mechanism underlying abnormal pain signaling. We also have compelling evidence in human IBS patients that a family of proteases are key mediators underlying another critical knowledge gap that we identified, i.e. which tissue mediators can lead to sustained and amplified abdominal pain. We and others found these proteases are elevated in IBS tissues, and that they sensitize DRG neurons - the primary sensory neurons that innervate the colon. Based on these findings, our goal is to test the overarching hypothesis that diet can trigger recurrent symptoms in IBS through activation of tissue proteases that cause exaggerated pain by signaling to nociceptive DRG neurons. Recurrent exposure to such diet components and the resulting protease signaling is an important cause of the waxing and waning of symptoms over time. Thus, our objective is to characterize the relationship of a specific dietary intervention with protease activity in IBS patients.
This will be a prospective study comparing the effect of low-FODMAP and high-FODMAP on symptoms and protease effects on the excitability of nociceptive DRG neurons. We will analyze the urinary metabolome as a secondary measure of mast cell mediators (i.e. histamine and proteases). We will also collect stool for possible future microbiome analysis as diet microbiome interactions (i.e. fermentation of the FODMAPs) may predict the magnitude of the response. The study will be conducted at Hotel Dieu Hospital's Gastroenterology clinics and endoscopy suite in Kingston, Ontario. This study will be comprised of the following four time periods: "baseline", "run-in", "high FODMAP diet", and "low FODMAP diet". Participants will undergo baseline assessment with questionnaires on demographics, IBS symptoms (IBS symptom severity scoring questionnaire), diet, as well as a questionnaire pertaining to psychological parameters. A detailed questionnaire pertaining to participants' diet will be administered at baseline. Baseline mucosal colonic biopsies will be obtained using limited flexible sigmoidoscopy. Baseline stool microbiota composition will be analysed by 16S rRNA gene profiling. Fecal calprotectin levels will be obtained from stool samples. Urine and blood metabolome will be analysed at baseline also using mass spectrometry. These will be repeated 3 weeks later during a run-in period to assess if these measurements are stable in time or not. This run-in period will be 3 weeks long. After completion of the run-in period, patients will be asked to consume a high FODMAP diet for 3 weeks. All tests carried out at baseline and during the run-in period will be carried out for a third time. Participants will meet with investigators and be given dietary guidance, including a handout outlining foods to eat and avoid. A dietician will be involved extensively in this process to ensure the instructions are adequate and accurate. For the remainder of the study, patients will not be able to take antibiotics, and fibre supplements. After the 3-week-long high FODMAP diet period, participants will meet again with the dietician to obtain instructions on how to consume a low FODMAP diet. After 3 weeks on a low FODMAP diet, all baseline testing will be performed a fourth time. We aim to enroll 20 patients. Based on a 70% response rate to low FODMAP diet (Halmos et al. 2014), and our experience in previous studies, this number should be adequate.
Please note that the biopsies taken at sigmoidoscopy will be processed at HDH for the supernatants, and then frozen for later electrophysiological studies at the Gastro-Intestinal Diseases Research Unit (GIDRU) at KGH.
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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Celine Morissette, PhD; Stephen Vanner, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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