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Background:
Allergic and inflammatory conditions have been increasing over the years. Many factors may play a role in this. Every day, people are exposed to pollution and chemicals in our foods, clothing, and all of the cleaning, hygiene, and other products we use. Studies have suggested there may be links between these environmental exposures and allergic and inflammatory illnesses. Researchers want to know more about how these exposures affect our health.
Objective:
To learn how everyday exposure to common substances affects people s health.
Eligibility:
Healthy people aged 18 to 80 years.
Design:
Participants will have 2 stays in the hospital. Each stay will last 7 days, and the stays will be spaced 4 to 6 weeks apart. During both stays, participants will remain confined to their room. They will eat only food from the menu, and they will use only provided products for personal care. (They may bring their own electronic devices, such as their phone and computer.)
One stay will be in a pure room. Participants will breathe filtered air, eat unprocessed foods, and use personal care products with fewer chemicals.
One stay will be in a room that allows exposure to common environmental chemicals. Some participants will be limited to only 1 type of exposure: chemicals thought to affect only skin, gut, or respiratory health. Some participants will be exposed to all 3 types.
Participants will undergo testing. Blood, skin cell, urine, mouth swabs, and stool samples will be taken. They will have lung tests, smell tests, and tests that measure the health of their skin.
These tests will be repeated in outpatient visits 2 weeks after each hospital stay....
Full description
Study Description:
In this study, we aim to investigate whether there is a link between lifestyle exposures, inflammation, and disease by exposing participants to environments with real-world levels of common skin and hair products (eg, soaps, shampoos), a typical Western diet of processed food, and/or ubiquitous air exposures, and to environments with cleaner, more natural contactants and less processed food. Participants will spend up to 7 days as an inpatient in a controlled environment with the assigned exposures, and up to 7 days as an inpatient in a cleaner environment. We will collect a variety of biospecimens and data throughout the inpatient stays to identify changes in skin, gastrointestinal (GI), and airway survey parameters.
The study will consist of 2 stages with a crossover design in each stage. Stage 1 will be divided into 3 cohorts: one cohort to identify changes in skin, one for GI changes, and one for airway changes. Within each cohort, participants will be block randomized to spend up to 7 days in the inpatient unit with either the specifically assigned experimental (common) or control (pure) exposures. Within each of the 3 cohorts, the common exposures will target a specific organ system (skin, GI, or airway). After a brief washout period, participants will then crossover to the other targeted exposure (ie, from common to pure or vice versa), for an additional inpatient stay of up to 7 days. The findings from each participant s first inpatient stay will be compared to findings from their crossover second inpatient stay.
The data collected from Stage 1 may be used to clarify the survey parameters of participants enrolled into Stage 2, in which new participants will be randomized to all common exposure domains (skin + GI + airway) vs. pure (control) and then a crossover.
Objectives:
Stage 1 Primary Objectives:
Stage 1 Secondary Objective: Determine the combined effects of common vs. pure exposures on the skin, gut, and airway in healthy volunteers.
Stage 2 Primary Objective: Determine the combined effects of common vs. pure exposures on the skin, gut, and airway in healthy volunteers.
Endpoints:
Stage 1 Primary Endpoints:
Stage 1 Secondary Endpoints will compare common vs pure crossover period responses as follows:
Cohort 1 (skin):
Cohort 2 (GI):
Cohort 3 (airway):
- Increase in R5 from admission to last day of inpatient stay by impulse oscillometry (IOS).
All 3 Cohorts:
Stage 2 Endpoint: Based on isolated exposures from single organ systems and randomization design in Stage 1, repeat primary and secondary endpoint responses of Stage 1.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
To participate in this study, an individual must meet all of the following criteria:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
120 participants in 6 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Hirsh D Komarow, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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