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Efficacy of Glutamine Supplementation in Patients Suffering From Irritable Bowel Syndrome With Impaired Intestinal Permeability (MISSISIIPI)

U

University Hospital, Rouen

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Irritable Bowel Syndrome

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: • Control group: treatment with a protein powder (Protifar) (Placébo) 5g 3 times a day for 8 weeks.
Dietary Supplement: • Experimental group: treatment with glutamine at a dose of 5g 3 times a day for 8 weeks

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06291038
2021/0381/HP

Details and patient eligibility

About

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) affects approximately 5% of the general population and remains a daily problem in the practice of clinicians with inconsistent effectiveness of treatments while patients' expectations are high.

One of the functional abnormalities described during IBS is increased intestinal permeability. This increase in intestinal permeability is primarily present in the diarrheal subtype (IBS-D) and can be measured using the lactulose/mannitol test.

Glutamine is a non-essential amino acid which regulates numerous metabolic pathways, and which plays a key role in the intestine because it is the preferential substrate of enterocytes and immune cells. Ex vivo, glutamine is able to restore the expression of tight junction proteins in patients suffering from IBS-D. On the other hand, glutamine supplementation is capable of reducing abdominal pain and restoring intestinal permeability disorders in a subgroup of patients with intestinal permeability disorder (post-infectious IBS-D).

Our working hypothesis would be that all patients suffering from IBS with permeability disorder, measured by the lactulose/mannitol test, could benefit from oral glutamine supplementation.

Full description

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) affects approximately 5% of the general population and remains a daily problem in the practice of clinicians with inconsistent effectiveness of treatments while patients' expectations are high.

One of the functional abnormalities described during IBS is increased intestinal permeability. This increase in intestinal permeability is primarily present in the diarrheal subtype (IBS-D) and can be measured using the lactulose/mannitol test.

Glutamine is a non-essential amino acid which regulates numerous metabolic pathways, and which plays a key role in the intestine because it is the preferential substrate of enterocytes and immune cells. Ex vivo, glutamine is able to restore the expression of tight junction proteins in patients suffering from IBS-D. On the other hand, glutamine supplementation is capable of reducing abdominal pain and restoring intestinal permeability disorders in a subgroup of patients with intestinal permeability disorder (post-infectious IBS-D).

Our working hypothesis would be that all patients suffering from IBS with permeability disorder, measured by the lactulose/mannitol test, could benefit from oral glutamine supplementation.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adult aged 18 to 75
  • Diarrheal irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D), according to the Rome IV criteria (appendix 2)
  • Francis score > 175/500 at inclusion (corresponding to moderate to severe IBS)
  • Treatments for IBS stable for >1 month
  • Affiliation to a social security system
  • Adult person having read and understood the information letter and signed the consent form
  • Woman of childbearing age having effective/very effective contraception (Cf. CTFG) (estrogen-progestins or intrauterine device or tubal ligation) for 1 month and a negative urine pregnancy test
  • Postmenopausal woman: confirmatory diagnosis (amenorrhea not medically induced for at least 12 months before the inclusion visit or biologically documented)

Exclusion criteria

  • Taking probiotics, anti-inflammatories, corticosteroids or antibiotics systemically (oral or injectable) in the month preceding the study and during the duration of the study treatment,
  • Known diagnosis of active autoimmune disease (type 1 diabetes, lupus, multiple sclerosis, thyroiditis, ankylosing spondylitis, rheumatoid arthritis or psoriasis)
  • Known allergy to glutamine,
  • Contraindication to taking glutamine, protein powder, lactulose or mannitol (including sugar-free chewing gum),
  • Use of osmotic laxatives and/or taking lactulose and/or protein supplementation (including taking glutamine) in the 4 weeks preceding the start of the study,
  • Renal insufficiency (GFR<40mL/min), hepatic insufficiency (PT<70) or known heart disease,
  • ATCD of digestive disease (celiac disease, chronic inflammatory bowel disease, abdominal surgery other than appendectomy or cholecystectomy),
  • Occlusive or subocclusive syndrome,
  • Digestive perforation or suspicion of perforation,
  • Abdominal pain syndrome of undetermined cause,
  • Chronic alcohol consumption (>14 units/week),
  • Pregnant or parturient or breastfeeding woman or proven absence of contraception,
  • Person deprived of liberty by an administrative or judicial decision or person placed under judicial protection/under guardianship or curatorship,
  • Person participating in research participating in another trial / having participated in another trial within 2 weeks,
  • History of illness or psychological or sensory abnormality likely to prevent the subject from fully understanding the conditions required for participation in the protocol or preventing them from giving informed consent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Glutamine
Experimental group
Description:
• Experimental group: treatment with glutamine at a dose of 5g 3 times a day for 8 weeks.
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: • Experimental group: treatment with glutamine at a dose of 5g 3 times a day for 8 weeks
Protifar
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
• Control group: treatment with a protein powder (Protifar) (Placébo) 5g 3 times a day for 8 weeks.
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: • Control group: treatment with a protein powder (Protifar) (Placébo) 5g 3 times a day for 8 weeks.

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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