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COMBI is a multi-center, randomized controlled trial among 70 older adults at risk of cognitive decline. The main goal is to investigate the effect of a 6-week colon-delivered multivitamin supplementation on the gut-brain axis in older adults, by assessing changes in brain function as well as intestinal changes compared to placebo.
Full description
Growing evidence indicates an important role for intestinal health in development of cognitive decline in ageing. Intestinal health, and especially the gut microbiome, is assumed to affect brain health and functioning via immunometabolic pathways captured in the gut-brain axis. However, it is unclear whether changes in intestinal health markers causally relate to cognitive decline in older adults and how. Nutritional interventions specifically targeting the gut were found beneficial for human cognition and brain function. An intervention based on colon-delivered vitamins (B2, B3, B6, B9, C, D3) is proposed to affect gut health using microbiome-dependent and independent pathways. In this study, it will be investigated whether this intervention affects neurocognition in ageing humans, to reveal causal gut-brain relationships in aging.Therefore, the primary goal of the COMBI study is to investigate the effect of a 6-week colon-delivered multivitamin supplementation on the gut-brain axis in older adults, by assessing changes in brain function as well as intestinal changes compared to placebo. Secondary, the effects of this 6-week colon-delivered multivitamin supplementation in older adults on the following parameters related to potential gut-brain pathways will also be investigated: (1) other relevant brain parameters, (2) other relevant intestinal parameters, (3) immunometabolic parameters related to gut-brain pathways, and (4) neuropsychological test battery scoring.
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Inclusion criteria
Written informed consent
Age between 60-75 years (at pre-screening)
Fluency in Dutch (speaking, reading and writing)
Score ≥2 points on the risk factor scale below based on self report:
Exclusion criteria
Food allergies or other issues with the vitamins included in the supplement
Concurrent participation in other intervention trials
Clinical diagnosis of ≥1 of the following:
Use of antibiotics within the previous 3 months before the study start.
Use of protonpump inhibitors within the study period (esomeprazole, lansoprazole, omeprazole, pantoprazole, rabeprazole)
Not willing to refrain from taking other supplements (containing vitamin B2, B3, B6, B9, or C, prebiotic, or probiotic) that can interfere with the study outcomes, from at least 2 weeks before start of the intervention till the end of the intervention period.
Answering "Yes" on ≥1 of the Donders Institute MRI safety screening protocol questions (see the 8 questions below):
Cognitive impairment as determined by Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS-M1), performed during pre-screening before inclusion and defined as a score <23.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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75 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Lianne B. Remie, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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