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The goal of this clinical trial is to understand varying in responses to different dietary patterns in healthy people who are getting a health screening colonoscopy.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
Participants will be in one of two groups:
Full description
Fiber fermentation in the colon produces short chain fatty acids (SCFA) and alters the microbial composition and activity. These effects may be mechanisms linking a high-fiber diet to improved health. However, different people may respond to dietary fiber differently and the variability in early, dietary-induced SCFA concentration changes has not been established. This lack of basic understanding in individual patterns of microbial SCFA production significantly limits efforts in the field of Precision Nutrition designed to target dietary strategies to improve health and advance lifestyle treatments in healthcare in the future. In this project, the central hypothesis is that the mechanisms by which dietary fiber provide metabolic benefits include a direct physical effect to improve fasting glucose and lipids and an effect related to increasing SCFA concentration. These are the ideas being tested in this study.
Using fiber derived from peas in a two-week human feeding intervention, Aim 1 will quantitate the variability in high-fiber-induced change in microbial composition and SCFA production by specifically testing the hypothesis that Following successful colonoscopy bowel prep, variability in the reduction in microbial species will be very small, while repopulation after a standardized high-fiber diet will be characterized by larger differences between individuals with regard to the quantity of bifidobacterial and the Firmicutes/ Bacteroidetes ratio.
Aim 2 will quantitate the magnitude of fasting changes in glucose and lipids following the short-term, high-fiber feeding period and identify candidate predictive factors (SCFA, BMI, sex, starting glucose level) for these changes by testing the hypothesis that a two-week, high-fiber diet will result in lower plasma glycemia and triglycerides. Participants (n=30) who have undergone a health-screening colonoscopy (HSC) are fed a high-fiber diet for 14 days. Fecal samples are collected before the colonoscopy and on days 1, 7 and 14 after the colonoscopy during high-fiber feeding. On day 1 and 14, the subject visits the clinical unit for a fasting blood draw (for measurement of glucose, lipids, and plasma SCFA), surveys and questionnaires.
A control arm will also be included as part of this study. The purpose of the control arm is to quantitate the variability in microbial composition and SCFA production from an ad libitum diet of participants. Instead of providing a high-fiber diet, the repopulation of the gut microbiome will be observed when participants eat a diet that is of their choosing. A series of food records and fecal samples pre- and post-procedure will be collected. Figure 2 shows the protocol of this arm. Food records will be collected: pre-procedure, days 0 (procedure day), 1, 2, 4, 7, 10, 13. Fecal collection will be collected: pre-procedure, 3, 5, 8, 11, 14. This arm will not include the blood collection or DEXA scan.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Intervention Arm
Inclusion Criteria:
Men and women
Age 45-65y: the average age of people referred for a screening colonoscopy
BMI ≥20.0 or ≤40.0 kg/m2
Weight stable: no fluctuations in body weight of greater than 4 kg in the last 3 months
Scheduled for a health-screening colonoscopy
Willingness to consume a high-fiber diet
Willing to provide blood and fecal samples
Healthy or have one or more characteristics of the metabolic syndrome (but not diabetic) Metabolic syndrome criteria
Subjects are also eligible if they are stably treated with statin drugs, anti-hypertensive medications, and anti-depressants. These are eligible as long as the drug category does not alter appetite, body weight, or the microbiome (if known).
Exclusion Criteria:
Control Arm Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Katherene Anguah, PhD; Elizabeth Parks, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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