Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

In end-stage renal disease (ESRD) cardiovascular and infectious complications are common. The gut microbiome might play an important pathophysiological role. ESRD is hypothesized to be associated with profound alterations of gut microbiome and gut permeability. The investigators aim to test whether a multispecies probiotic mixture is able to revert the microbiome changes and decrease gut permeability. Furthermore the investigators aim to test whether this improvement in microbiome composition and gut permeability is also associated with improvements in endotoxemia, uremia and cardiovascular risk factors.


Clinical Trial Description

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) has a prevalence of 10% in the general population and up to 20% in high-risk groups, such as patients with diabetes. Despite the widespread availability of renal replacement therapy in the western world, mortality of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is still high. The life expectancy of patients with renal replacement therapy in Austria is reduced by more than 50%.

Patients on renal replacement therapy exhibit an increased cardiovascular mortality (10-30 fold higher than in the general population) associated with accelerated vascular calcification. The KIDNEY DISEASE IMPROVING GLOBAL OUTCOMES (KDIGO)-work group introduced the term CKD-Mineral and Bone Disorder (CKD-MBD) which describes a clinical syndrome encompassing mineral, bone, and calcific cardio-vascular abnormalities that develop as a complication of CKD. This syndrome emerges as a result of a declining kidney function and is characterized by changes of circulating levels of parathyroid hormone (PTH), 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D),1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25(OH)2D), other vitamin D metabolites and fibroblast growth factor-23 (FGF-23). The ability of the failing kidneys to excrete phosphate is diminished and hyperphosphatemia occurs. High phosphate levels together with calcium as well as low concentrations of fetuin A, the main calcification inhibitor under physiological conditions, lead to increased vascular and extravascular calcification and renal bone disease. Another important calcification inhibitor is the vitamin K2-dependent matrix Gla-protein (MGP). Dialysis patients exhibit a low vitamin K intake and suffer substantially from vitamin K deficiency. Insufficient vitamin K intake leads to the production of non-carboxylated, inactive MGP and deficiency of carboxylated MGP may contribute substantially to the development and progression of arterial calcification. Bacterial infection and sepsis, although decreasing over the last decades, also account for up to 20% of deaths in ESRD-patients and are the second most common cause of mortality and hospitalization. Mortality due to sepsis is 100 - 300 times higher in dialysis patients as compared to the general population. The mechanisms of the increased susceptibility to infection are unclear but recent studies suggest that in patients with ESRD, innate immune response is defective. One reason for defective innate immunity might lie in an increased risk for endotoxemia. Hemodialysis (HD)-induced regional splanchnic ischemia leads to increased gut permeability and consecutive endotoxin translocation. This possibly results in alterations in gut microbiome composition.

Recently profound alterations of the composition of the gut microbiome in ESRD have been shown. In ESRD subjects, more Firmicutes, Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria and fewer Sutterellaceae, Bacteroidaceae, and Lactobacillaceae were observed relative to controls. The frequent use of antibiotics, phosphate binders and an often polypragmatic drug consumption has a considerable impact on the microbiome of ESRD-patients.

These alterations of gut microbiota can impact on several mechanisms in ESRD. Gut bacteria produce vitamin K and the microbiome composition might therefore play a pivotal role in providing enough vitamin K for a sufficient carboxylation of MGP, a potent inhibitor of arterial calcification. Treatment with vitamin K antagonists, for example, has been associated with a 10 fold increased risk for the development of calcification and calciphylaxis, a life threatening calcifying arteriolopathy in CKD-patients. Furthermore the gut is a potential source of endotoxin in patients with ESRD, due to translocation of bacterial products across the gastrointestinal barrier. In ESRD the presence of endotoxin is an independent predictor for mortality. Ultrafiltration during hemodialysis treatment leads to critical ischemia in the splanchnic vascular bed, thus adversely affecting the integrity of the gut barrier. Disruption of gut barrier function in ESRD allows translocation of endotoxin and bacterial metabolites to the systemic circulation, which contributes to inflammation and uremia and prompts progression of the disease. Furthermore, subclinical inflammation in ESRD-patients has been shown to promote progression of cardiovascular disease as well. The gut microbiome also impacts on glucose metabolism and plays a critical role in obesity and the development of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. Protein fermentation by gut microbiota generates toxic metabolites and many of the known uremic toxins are of intestinal origin, including p-cresol and indoxyl sulfate. Modulation of the microbiome can contribute to the reduction/elimination of uremic toxins.

Improving the poor prognosis of ESRD patients is an ongoing challenge. An increased awareness of the limitations in conventional dialysis techniques has renewed interest in alternative therapeutics in recent years. An unmet clinical need for adjuvant therapeutic strategies persists in patients whether renal transplantation is intended or not. Supplementation of probiotics and thereby targeting the intestine, an important source of endotoxin and uremic toxins, might be a promising approach to partly overcome the high morbidity and mortality in ESRD patients. Probiotics are living beneficial microorganisms, able to gastroduodenal passage and maintain viability throughout the gut. Feasibility of gut microbiome modulation in ESRD was shown in animal and human settings. However, so far, it is unknown to what extend probiotics are able to re-establish gut microbiome homeostasis in ESRD. Furthermore the effects of a probiotic intervention on cardiovascular risk factors, inflammation, gut barrier and uremia have not been studied in detail yet. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02568891
Study type Interventional
Source Medical University of Graz
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase N/A
Start date January 2017
Completion date January 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04087213 - Study of HemoCareā„¢ Hemodialysis System for Home Nocturnal Dialysis in Patients With ESRD N/A
Completed NCT02207088 - Ombitasvir/ABT-450/Ritonavir and Dasabuvir With or Without Ribavirin in HCV Genotype 1-Infected Adults With Chronic Kidney Disease Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT03090828 - Economic Evaluation of an Education Platform for Patients With End-stage Renal Disease N/A
Completed NCT02237521 - The Effect of the Incretin Hormones on the Endocrine Pancreatic Function During Hyperglycemia in End-stage Renal Disease N/A
Withdrawn NCT01691196 - Inflammation in Peritoneal Dialysis Patients: Effect of Obesity
Completed NCT01394341 - Liraglutide Treatment to Patients With Severe Renal Insufficiency Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT00247507 - The Effects of Acetylcysteine on Alleviating Damage of Oxidative Stress in Hemodialysis Patients Phase 4
Completed NCT00307463 - Effects of Strict Volume Control in Hypertensive Hemodialysis Patients on Cardiac Structure and Chronic Inflammation Phase 4
Recruiting NCT00155363 - Effect of Different Hemodialysis Modality on Adiponectin,Vascular Function and Clinical Prognosis Phase 4
Completed NCT00234156 - The Effect of Fructose on Blood Fats in Dialysis Patients and Healthy Volunteers N/A
Completed NCT00586131 - Arterial pH and Total Body Nitrogen Balances in APD Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT05027074 - Global Study of MK-2060 (Anti-Factor XI Monoclonal Antibody) in Participants With End Stage Renal Disease Receiving Hemodialysis (FXI Hemodialysis Study) (MK-2060-007) Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04575077 - The Role of Hepcidin as a Biomarker to Predict Successful Renal Transplantation
Enrolling by invitation NCT05001009 - Goals of Care Conversations Study N/A
Completed NCT01756508 - Eculizumab for Prevention and Treatment of Kidney Graft Reperfusion Injury Phase 2
Recruiting NCT03862859 - The Danish Warfarin-Dialysis Study - Safety and Efficacy of Warfarin in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation on Dialysis Phase 4
Terminated NCT03661229 - Cardiovascular and Respiratory Assessment Using Biometric Signals in a Non-contact Monitoring Device N/A
Completed NCT03288922 - Protein-bound Toxin Removal Between Limited Blood Flow Super High-flux Online HDF and High-Efficiency Online HDF N/A
Completed NCT02360748 - A Plant Based High Protein Diet to Improve Nutritional Outcomes in Peritoneal Dialysis Patients N/A
Completed NCT02572882 - Gut Microbiome and p-Inulin in Hemodialysis N/A