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Intestinal Microbiota in Patients Before and After Bariatric Surgery and Healthy Controls

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University Hospital Basel

Status

Completed

Conditions

Obesity

Treatments

Procedure: Gastric Bypass or Sleeve gastrectomy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02563119
CBeglinger

Details and patient eligibility

About

Studying obesity and metabolic syndrome attention is focused more and more on gut microbiota. In humans and animals, bariatric surgery (mainly gastric bypass surgery) lead to alterations of gut microbiota, which seem to be favourable. In this study the investigators aim to examine the effect of different bariatric procedures on composition of gut microbiota.

Full description

The human gastrointestinal tract is home to an extremely numerous and diverse collection of microbes communities, collectively termed the "intestinal microbiota". This amazingly complex and poorly understood group of communities has an enormous impact on humans. Indeed, microbiota is considered to play a number of key roles in the maintenance of host health, including aiding digestion of otherwise indigestible dietary compounds, synthesis of vitamins and other beneficial metabolites, immune system regulation and enhanced resistance against colonization by pathogenic microorganisms. Conversely, the intestinal microbiota is also a potent source of antigens and potentially harmful compounds. Schematically, humans can be considered to exist in a state of natural balance with their microbial inhabitants. A shift in the balance of microbiota composition such that it may become deleterious to host health is termed "dysbiosis". Dysbiosis of the gut microbiota has been implicated in numerous disorders, ranging from intestinal such as inflammatory bowel diseases and colorectal cancer to disorders with more systemic effects such as diabetes, obesity, insulin resistance and steatohepatitis. The link between the microbes in the human gut and the development of obesity, cardiovascular disease and metabolic syndromes, such as type 2 diabetes, is becoming clearer but, because of the complexity of the microbial community, the functional connections are less well understood.

In humans and animals, bariatric surgery (mainly gastric bypass surgery) lead to alterations of gut microbiota, which seem to be favourable. In this study the investigators aim to examine the effect of different bariatric procedures on composition of gut microbiota.

Enrollment

70 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 30 healthy controls: BMI 18-30kg/m2 good general health
  • 40 morbidly obese patients (BMI >35kg/m2) scheduled for either sleeve gastrectomy or gastric bypass surgery

Exclusion criteria

  • Antibiotic therapy within the last 2 months before enrolment
  • regular intake of proton pump Inhibitors (PPI)
  • previous surgery on the gastrointestinal tract (appendectomy acceptable)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

70 participants in 3 patient groups

Gastric Bypass Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Twenty morbidly obese patients undergoing gastric bypass surgery
Treatment:
Procedure: Gastric Bypass or Sleeve gastrectomy
Sleeve Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Twenty morbidly obese patients undergoing sleeve gastrectomy
Treatment:
Procedure: Gastric Bypass or Sleeve gastrectomy
Healthy controls
No Intervention group
Description:
Thirty healthy, lean controls

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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