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Clinical Trial Summary

When all the food we eat is digested, it will increase blood glucose. Two people can have different glucose blood levels to the same food and one reason can be bacteria live in our gut. There are more than a thousand bacteria species in our gastrointestinal tract that have an important role in the proper functioning of our body, so our gut microbiome is a key piece for our nutrition and blood glucose control. Nowadays, one of the major public health concerns is the rise of people with diabetes (a disease characterized by an increase in blood glucose) and the increase in obesity, in which one of several risks is diabetes. There are multiple reasons for people develop those diseases, however, some care on diet management can prevent, delay, or improve the effects of these illnesses. Therefore, this study proposes studying the blood glucose variation between healthy volunteers and if there is a relationship between that variation and the intestinal bacteria present. These results can help doctors and nutritionists elaborate a personalized diet for people who need blood glucose level control. The investigators are recruiting volunteers aged 18 to 60, healthy, living at Florianopolis and the surroundings to participate in this crossover randomized N-of-1 study. The participants must collect fecal samples. After collection, the participants will meet the investigators and receive a kit containing ten standardized breakfasts, with two kinds of muffins, and a kit containing a glucose monitor (Abbott Freestyle Libre-CE marked) to monitor their blood sugar levels. The volunteers must have breakfast with the standardized meals and monitor the fasting glucose blood and postprandial glucose blood levels for ten consecutive days. Besides, they must take notes (like a diet diary) about all the food they ingest during the day in ten days of the study.


Clinical Trial Description

Choice of design: The study is a N-of-1 randomized series trial with multiple crossovers. Study population: This study will monitor healthy volunteers and they will be recruited via social media like Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn platforms. Screening Assessment: The participants will be selected based on inclusion and exclusion criteria by study management researchers. Recruitment will be done via e-mail the participant will receive all the information about the study including the consent term and the anthropometric questionnaire. If he/she accepts it will be sent a collection kit for the fecal samples to the participant's address. Study duration: Each participant will take part in the study for ten days. Dietary intervention: The participants will receive 10 standardized meals, divided into two kinds of muffins, which consist of a low-carbohydrate diet and a vegan one. The low-carb muffin will have a glycemic control characteristic, with a low carbohydrate content, below 45% of the carbohydrates recommended by the Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Ranges (AMDR), while the vegan muffin will consist entirely of plant-based foods in the recommended macronutrient proportions. Both muffins will be similar in calories and standardized at 25% of daily calories, equivalent to the caloric distribution of breakfast. After the fecal collection, the participant must introduce the standardized meals and the glucose monitoring device inserted. The meal order must obey the randomization established. Before breakfast, the participant will have to measure the fasting glucose with the monitoring glucose device and then eat the breakfast. After ingesting the muffin, the participant will measure glucose levels every 30 minutes over a 2-hour period, totaling four postprandial glucose measurements. Participants are free to eat whatever they wish at all other times, but they will report every meal in a diet diary. Together with breakfast, they can drink coffee without milk and sugar or water. The volunteers shouldn't do fasting exercises either for about two hours after breakfast. Anthropometry dietary and lifestyle questionnaire: Before the participants initiate the intervention they will answer a simple questionnaire about their weight, height, gastrointestinal symptoms, stool shape, drugs in use, antibiotics, proton pump inhibitors use, any diagnosis of chronic disease, kind of diet, and activity information. Digital devices: Participants will be asked to record daily dietary intake on an online platform, like Google Sheets. The continuous glucose monitor (Freestyle Libre, CGM) will be inserted on the back of the upper arm by themselves, or if they prefer it can be inserted by one of the researchers when they receive all the study kits. Subcutaneous interstitial fluid glucose will be measured before breakfast and two hours later. At the end of the intervention period, the CGM can be removed at home. Researchers' email addresses and cellphone number will be always available to participants to make any question. Digital app: Participants will need to download the app FreeStyle LibreLink for the subcutaneous interstitial fluid glucose to be measured with their cellphones. Sample size: The sample size was calculated through simulation, assuming a Gaussian multilevel model, comparing two diets with random intercept and diet effects per participant. The simulation assumptions were validated with a nutritionist to ensure plausible values for the outcome, intra-individual and inter-individual outcome variability, and individual effect variability. A minimum clinically significant effect on postprandial blood glucose of 15 mg/dL was determined. This value was used to define the expected range for 95% of true individual effects. The number of cycles was fixed at five to minimize the study time for each recruited participant. Under these assumptions, the simulation of 10,000 series of N-of-1 clinical trials determined it would be recruiting 80 participants. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06051318
Study type Interventional
Source BiomeHub Biotechnology Company
Contact Luiz Felipe V. de Oliveira, PhD
Phone +554830121322
Email felipe@biome-hub.com
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date January 2024
Completion date June 30, 2025

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