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The purpose of this prospective cohort study is to compare upper GI symptoms and endoscopy findings in Canada with Japan and Iran, and correlate this with the upper GI microbiome. The investigators plan to recruit 500 new patients referred for upper GI endoscopy in Canada (McMaster University) and 500 in Japan (Tohoku University Hospital) and 500 from Iran (Tehran University of Medical Sciences). Written consent will be obtained from all participants. Patients will complete three symptom questionnaires and a demographic one before endoscopy. Then saliva collection device will be applied for collecting saliva and microbiota from the oral cavity. Esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) will be performed thereafter and brushing of the esophagus, stomach, and the duodenum will be done using a sterile sheathed brush (one for each site) to sample collect gut microbiota and gastric biopsies will be done for assessing H.pylori status.
In addition, a group of these patients will undergo measurement of nitrate reductase activity (NRA) in their oral cavity. This will be done on twenty erosive gastro-esophageal reflux disease (GERD) patients, twenty non-erosive GERD patients, and twenty patients without any endoscopic or clinical GERD. This latter part of the study will be done at the Canadian and Iranian sites only. Bacterial community profiling of the 16S rRNA gene will be carried out using paired end reads of the V3 region. Triplicate amplifications will be pooled for 150 or 250 nt paired-end Illumina sequencing in the McMaster Genome Center. For specific substudies analysis of the mycome will also be carried out.
Full description
Objective The purpose of the trial is to compare upper GI symptoms and endoscopy findings in Canada with Japan and Iran, and correlate this with the upper GI microbiome.
The primary outcomes is the bacterial microbiome in patients with FD compared to control patients without upper GI symptoms and a normal endoscopy. The investigators will do a planned subgroup analysis according to country of recruitment as well as sex and age based subgroups (<or =50 years versus >50 years)
Secondary outcomes are
Methodology Study population, inclusion & exclusion criteria This is a prospective international cohort study in Canada, Japan, and Iran. The investigators will recruit adult patients (≥18 years of age) who are undergoing esophago-gastro duodenoscopy (EGD) for any reason and are consenting to be enrolled in the study during the study period. The control group will be patients with no or minimal upper GI symptoms who are referred for EGD. Exclusion criteria will be the patients who cannot speak English in Canada, who cannot speak Japanese in Japan, and cannot speak Persian in Iran.
Methods Written consent will be obtained from all participants. The consent by clinician for medical reasons includes standard endoscopy and gastric biopsies for assessing H.pylori status. The research consent contains saliva collection with specific device called "Oracol plus®" and tissue brushing at the oesophagus, stomach (body and antrum) and distal duodenum. If the patient is eligible for this study, the investigators will record demographics (age, sex, education, race, past medical history, medication taking - especially PPIs and antibiotics), and the main reason for endoscopy. Patients will complete questionnaires; upper GI symptoms measured by Short Form Leeds Dyspepsia Questionnaire (SFLDQ), quality of life measured by EQ-5D, and anxiety and depression measured by The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Then saliva collection device; Oracol plus® (Malvern Medical Developments, Worchester, UK) will be applied to collect saliva. The device is designed to be used in a similar way to a toothbrush. Saliva is collected by rubbing the sponge swab firmly along the gum (at the base of the teeth if present) as well as the dorsum of the tongue until the sponge is wet, this takes about 1 minute. Once the saliva has been taken it is secure within the container, a microtube is incorporated within the device so that the saliva is centrifuged directly into the micro tube provided. This reduces the risk of aerosol contamination. This process is aimed to document the microbiomes in oral cavity in order to confirm the resident microbiomes in upper GI tract.
The oral nitrate reductase activity (NRA) measurement
Considering that erosive GERD is rather infrequent in Japan, this part of the study will be performed in Hamilton and Tehran as follows:
Twenty erosive GERD patients, twenty non-erosive GERD patients enrolled in JUICE from Canada and twenty controls with no upper GI symptoms are enrolled after informed consent is obtained. In addition to the procedures in described in JUICE, the following is done for these groups:
Definitions:
For practical purposes, GERD is defined clinically according to the Montreal summit as troublesome regurgitation or heartburn occurring at least once a week. This definition will be used to enroll the non-erosive patients as well as excluding GERD in controls. It will also be used to assess the erosive patients clinically. The controls need not only to be asymptomatic (according to the above-mentioned definition), but also to have no gross endoscopic sign of reflux.
Esophagogastroduodenoscopy and sampling for the microbiome EGD will be performed and a sterile sheathed brush will be used to collect gut microbiota. For each patient, tissue brushing will be performed first from the the middle and lower esophagus with one brush, then the stomach (greater and lesser curvature of body and antrum) with a second brush, the duodenal cap and distual duodenum with a third brush. This will be conducted as the endoscope is introduced and in each case the collection will be obtained by gently brushing the appropriate area. The material collected on the brush surface will be re-suspended into RNA later in a sterile tube. Samples were allowed to incubate at room temperature for up to 2 hours, then frozen and stored at -80 °C. Japanese frozen microbiome samples will ship or bring to McMaster Genome Centre by one of investigators. The Iranian samples will be processed in Tehran and the extracted DNA samples will be transferred to McMaster for sequencing. The last part i.e. the analysis of the sequenced DNA samples can either be done in Tehran or at McMaster. Two biopsies each from antrum and body of stomach will be obtained to assess H. pylori status as a standard of care of both cohorts.
Microbiome analysis DNA extraction and molecular profiling will be carried out using standard protocols. Bacterial community profiling of the 16S rRNA gene will be carried out using paired end reads of the V3 region. Triplicate amplifications will be pooled for 150 or 250 nt paired-end Illumina sequencing in the McMaster Genome Center. This approach provides overlapping sequence reads of the V3 region, which can be used for correcting poor quality base calls and increasing sequencing accuracy. Multiplexing the run with barcoded primers will provide approximately 25,000 sequence reads per sample. The sequence data will be processed by an in-house bioinformatics pipeline that incorporates quality filtering with cutadap PandaSeq, AbundantOTU+, mothur, and QIIME. Output will include clustered sequences in operational taxonomic units (OTUs) using AbundantOTU+ and taxonomic assignments using the RDP classifier classifier using the Greengenes training set. Microbiome analysis will include α-diversity metrics for each sample and β-diversity measures (weighted and unweighted unifrac, Bray-Curtis, nonmetric multidimensional scaling) and other statistical analysis using QIIME25 and PhyloSeq. Functional properties of the microbiota will be inferred using Phylogenetic Investigation of Communities by Reconstruction of Unobserved States (PICRUSt) and further compared using Statistical
Sample size The investigators plan to recruit 500 new patients referred for upper GI endoscopy in Canada (McMaster University) and 500 in Japan (Division of Gastroenterology, Tohoku University Hospital) and 500 from Iran (Tehran University). This is based on preliminary data from 20 patients that have had assessment of the microbiome in the esophagus, stomach and duodenum and assumes that the odds ratio for the operational taxonomic unit will be 2 fold between organic disease and healthy control (EGD with no GI symptoms e.g. for evaluation of anemia where no abnormality is found) and assumes that there will be at least 50 healthy controls and 50 patients with a given disease. 500 patients will be needed as the investigators will be evaluating gastric ulcer, FD, esophagitis separately and will need to adjust for multiple testing.
For NRA measurement, the investigators need 18 patients among GERD, NERD and control arm. This assumes a Z-alpha of 1.96 (two-sided), 1-beta=0.8416, Sigma of 0.99, and mean difference of 0.9310.
Statistical analysis Baseline descriptive data will be analyzed and reported as means and standard deviations for continuous variables, and percentage and frequency for categorical variables. Dichotomous variables will be analyzed suing Chi squared (x2) test and continuous using Student's t test (for two groups) and ANOVA (for more than two groups) unless numbers are < 50 in a group when the investigators will use Mann Whitney U test for two groups and Kruskal-Wallis for more than two groups. SPSS version 21.0 (SPSS (Japan) Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) for Windows systems will be used with differences considered significant at the <0.05 level for the primary outcomes and <0.01 for the secondary to adjust for multiple testing.
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Takeshi Kanno, MD, PhD; Paul Moayyedi, MD,PhD,FRCP
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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