Healthy Individuals Clinical Trial
Official title:
Tolerability and Risk of Adverse Events With a Probiotic Supplement: A Randomised and Placebo Controlled Study in Healthy Individuals
The butyrate-producing bacterium Faecalibacterium prausnitzii is abundant in the human bowel
and can make up to 5% of the gastrointestinal flora in healthy individuals. A reduced
presence of it has been associated with an imbalance in the gastrointestinal flora of
metabolic syndromes such as type 2 diabetes, fat liver, and in inflammatory bowel disease.
The present double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized study is designed to investigate if
dietary supplementation with F.prausnitzii (combined with D. piger) once a day for 8
consecutive weeks is tolerated compared to placebo and if it can affect the metabolism in a
positive way.
The understanding of the role of the gastrointestinal microbes for human health has gained
considerable interest in recent years. The butyrate-producing bacterium Faecalibacterium
prausnitzii is a naturally occurring bacterial species in the human gut that can make up to
5% of the gastrointestinal flora in healthy individuals.
Several studies have shown that the presence of butyrate producing bacteria, including F.
prausnitzii, is lower in patients with inflammatory bowel disease; Crohn's disease and
ulcerative colitis. Furthermore, lower levels of short fatty acids have been found in people
with ulcerative colitis as compared to healthy individuals. Similar results have been
obtained from studies about Crohn's disease, where people with a low abundance of F.
prausnitzii run a higher risk of post-operative recurrence of their disease.
It has become evident that bacteria in the human gastrointestinal tract are symbiotic and
dependent on each other's metabolism. Studies conducted by the sponsor (Metabogen AB) have
shown that butyrate production from F. prausnitzii increases in the presence of Desulfovibrio
piger, a common sulphate-reducing bacterium present in the human intestine. The symbiotic
relationship between F. prausnitzii and D. piger can be utilised by combining these bacterial
species into a probiotic dietary supplement, thus maintaining butyrate production in the
intestine.
In animal models, who received approximately 5,000 times higher doses per kilogram of body
weight than the highest dose scheduled in the proposed study, the intake of F. prausnitzii
has shown anti-inflammatory effects as well as positive effects on the metabolism.
The present study is a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, study in 48 healthy
individuals (men and women) between 20 and 40 years old recruited from the general
population. These volunteers will either receive F. prausnitzii and D. piger (in two
different doses) or placebo orally once a day for 8 consecutive weeks. The investigators will
assess how well treatment with the study product compared to placebo is tolerated
(termination due to adverse events within 8 weeks of treatment) and if it can cause
gastrointestinal symptoms (measured with The Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale). The
investigators will also assess if the intake of the study product can potentially give
positive effects in the metabolism (blood glucose, fatty acids, protein ect).
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