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Clinical Trial Summary

Crohn's disease (CD) is becoming more common. One of the main features of this disease is weight loss and malnutrition with symptoms such as tummy aches and bloating. These problems have a strong negative effect on the patients' quality of life but the causes of these problems are not well understood. Enteroendocrine cells are nutrient sensors in the bowel that secrete special chemicals (called hormones) that control appetite and the movements all the gut. The investigators think that this control mechanism goes wrong in Crohn's patients and they have set off to do more research on this. Looking at the inside work of the gut has always been difficult and at times unpleasant for patients, however recent developments in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are allowing the investigators to study the workings of the gut in greater detail and without discomfort for the patients.

Our main objective is to investigate the difference in small bowel motility between CD patients with active ileal disease and healthy volunteers.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: Poor nutrition in Crohn's disease (CD) is common but poorly understood. Apart from disease burden and repeated surgery, reduction in appetite might be an aetiological factor.

Enteroendocrine cells (EC) are intraluminal nutrient sensors. They play a pivotal role in orchestrating physiological functions in the gastrointestinal tract. Sensing the nutrient content of the lumen, they secrete multiple peptides and amines that control gut secretory and motor functions. CD patients with small bowel inflammation show increased expression in EC peptides with exaggerated postprandial responses in anorectic EC hormones. This is associated with symptoms of nausea and anorexia, with EC-peptide expression decreasing to normality in remission.

There has been a longstanding interest on the effect of CD on gastric emptying and gastrointestinal motility. Recent technological advances have allowed us to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure both disease activity and intestinal motility.

Reduced intestinal motility has been recently shown in CD patients with active terminal ileal disease. A significant negative correlation is observed between terminal ileal motility and histological, biochemical and radiological measures of disease activity. Intestinal hypomotility may be observed in proximal unaffected segments of small bowel as well.

An increase in EC activity could potentially lead to altered appetite and symptoms of nausea through delayed gastric emptying and most importantly delayed small bowel transit. This mechanistic link has not been described and present findings have not been correlated to patient symptoms. This work can potentially open a new therapeutic pathway in CD therapy. Optimisation studies in healthy volunteers (HV) are urgently needed.

Aims & Hypothesis: In intestinal inflammation due to CD, the observed up-regulation of fasting and postprandial EC peptides may correlate with a delayed whole gut transit specifically small bowel transit and gastric emptying.

Experimental protocol and methods: 15 Crohn's patients and 20 Healthy volunteers will be recruited. Standard MRI exclusion criteria will apply.

This study will have an open-label design. The subjects will be asked to fast from 2000 h. They will be asked to fill in a questionnaire to ensure adherence to the study day restrictions.

On the day of the scan, they will only be allowed a small glass of water on waking. They will undergo a baseline fasting scan at 0900 hours (defined at t = -45 min time point), together with a fasting baseline blood sample. At 0925 hours, they will be asked to eat their test meal within a maximum time of 20 min so that at 0945 hours the subjects will undergo a first immediate postprandial scan (defined as t = 0 min). This will be followed with data collection (MRI, questionnaire data and blood samples) time points every 15 min for the first 60 min and every 30 min up to 270 min.

At each time point, the positioning of the subject, setup and data collection will take ~15min. After the first 60 min, at completion of data collection at each time-point, the volunteers will be kept sitting upright in a quiet lounge next to the scanner. At each time point, volunteers will fill a 100mm Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) symptoms questionnaire scoring their feeling of fullness, bloating, distension, abdominal pain/discomfort and nausea. The VAS anchors were from 'not' to 'extremely'. Participants will be given a meal at the end of the study.

Participants will be then given a volume (750mls-1000mls) of contrast agent to drink (within 45 minutes) and a further MRI scan (time=30 minutes) will be undertaken to quantify disease activity. Participants will be given a meal at the end of the study. This is not part of the research protocol.

MRI scanning will be carried out supine on either a 1.5T or 3.0 T Philips Achieva MRI scanner (Philips Healthcare, Best, The Netherlands) depending on availability. Fasting and post-prandial plasma tests: On the morning of the test, a 10 ml fasting blood sample will be drawn in aprotonin/EDTA tubes (BD-361017, BD Diagnostics, Oxford). Samples will be measured every 15 min to 270 min. Samples will be centrifuged at 4000 rpm for 5 min and stored on ice. Measurement of plasma peptides: All EC peptides (GLP-1, PYY) will be analysed through ELISA techniques (Millipore, UK). Serum CCK will be measured by RIA (Euro Diagnostic Products, Sweden). Total EC plasma peptide response will be presented as per individual time points and compositely as area under the curve (AUC). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03052465
Study type Interventional
Source University of Nottingham
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 16, 2015
Completion date March 7, 2017

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