Irritable Bowel Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Fructose and Fructans and Irritable Bowel Syndrome: MRI Study of Underlying Mechanisms
The purpose of the study is to investigate if patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
who also report bloating are more likely to report clinically important gastrointestinal
symptoms after consuming fructose or fructans than after consuming glucose. We will also use
MRI imaging to investigate the mechanisms by which those symptoms might be caused.
We will also study a parallel group of age and gender frequency matched healthy volunteers
to provide descriptive statistics on a likely reference range for the healthy population.
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common chronic condition, the main features of which are
pain in the abdomen, an erratic bowel habit and sometimes bloating. Recent research has
found that certain carbohydrates (sugars) in the diet can cause symptoms such as discomfort,
bloating and wind/gas in people with IBS. These sugars are not well digested in the small
bowel. They move to the colon (large bowel) where bacteria act on them by fermentation,
producing gas. Some of the gas is absorbed and breathed out through the lungs, where we can
measure it. The rest is released as flatulence/ wind, or occasionally belching. People
without IBS rarely get symptoms after consuming these sugars. We want to find out what is
different in IBS sufferers.
We will study fructose and fructans, sugars found in fruit, vegetables and wheat. Fructose
draws water into the small bowel but fructans do not so we can compare effects on the small
bowel and colon. Participants will attend three times, and on each occasion consume a drink
containing either fructose, fructans, or glucose - a sugar that does not cause symptoms.
Neither they nor the investigators present will know which drink is which. They will record
their symptoms over the next 5 hours. We will observe how many report a clinically important
increase in symptoms.
To look at what is happening in the bowel we will use a technique called Magnetic Resonance
Imaging (MRI). We want to see if more gas, or water, builds up in people with IBS than in
healthy volunteers. We will also measure the amount of hydrogen released in the breath to
see if this is could be a simple bedside test that agrees with the MRI findings
Finding differences between the response of participants to fructose, fructans and glucose
could change the way we advise patients, and could lead to the use of MRI as a test for IBS.
PURPOSE
1. To investigate if patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) who also report bloating
are more likely to report clinically important gastrointestinal symptoms following
ingestion of fructose or fructans compared to glucose.
2. To investigate the mechanisms by which those symptoms might be caused.
There will be a parallel pilot study of age and gender frequency matched healthy volunteers
(HV).
HYPOTHESES
1. Patients with IBS will report more symptoms after ingestion of either fructose or
fructans compared to an equal mass of glucose.
2. Fructans and fructose will each cause greater H2 excretion and greater volume of gas in
the colon (CGV) than glucose.
3. Fructose will cause greater increase in small bowel fluid volume/ water content (SBWC)
than glucose or fructans.
4. Greater CGV will provoke more and/or more intense symptoms
5. Greater SBWC will provoke more and/or more intense symptoms.
Hypotheses arising from pilot data on healthy volunteers
1. Fructans and fructose will cause greater H2 excretion and volume of gas in the colon in
IBS patients than in HV.
2. Fructose will cause greater increase in SBWC in IBS patients than in HV.
3. IBS patients will report more symptoms after ingestion of fructose or fructans than
will HV.
PRIMARY OBJECTIVE
- To compare the proportion of patients reporting clinically important symptoms after
fructose and fructans with the proportion after glucose.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES
- Investigate the differences in effect of fructose, fructans and glucose on breath H2
excretion, SBWC, and CGV.
- Investigate the relationships between symptoms H2 excretion, symptoms and SBWC, and
symptoms and CGV.
EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVE
- Compare the differences between HV and IBS patients in their reactions to glucose,
fructose and fructans.
TRIAL / STUDY CONFIGURATION
This is a 3-period, 3-treatment, placebo-controlled, double-blind, cross-over trial of IBS
patients taking 40gm of glucose, fructose or fructans. There is a parallel study of age and
gender frequency matched healthy volunteers for pilot comparison data.
This study consists of 4 visits to the hospital or the 1.5T MRI site, Sir Peter Mansfield
Magnetic Resonance Centre, University of Nottingham. The first visit will be a screening
visit where potential participants will be assessed for eligibility and consent for the
study. At this visit they will be given the long form of the Information Sheet which will be
discussed to ensure understanding. The visit will last 1-2 hours and will include completion
of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Questionnaire, Personal Health Questionnaire (PHQ-15)
and Rome III criteria questionnaire, as well as brief medical history and drug history. If
they are eligible and consent to be in the study, participants will also be given 7-day
stool diaries, to be filled in during the week preceding each subsequent study day, and a
stool collection kit in order to bring a sample to visit 2.
The remaining 3 visits will be test visits, called study days. They will last around 6
hours. They will be at least one week apart. Participants will need to attend the 1.5T
scanner at the Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance Centre, University of Nottingham. On
each test visit participants will receive (according to the randomisation of sequences) one
of the 3 test products.
Each participant will need to fast from 8pm on the day before study days (visits 2, 3&4)
until arrival at the study site. They will attend the 1.5T MRI scanner between 08:00 and
08:30, give a saliva sample by spitting down a straw into a laboratory container and have a
baseline MRI scan. After rinsing his/her mouth with a mouth wash (Corsodyl Daily Defence
Alcohol Free Mouthwash, available in supermarkets and pharmacies), they will give a breath
sample, complete a symptom questionnaire, complete an anxiety questionnaire - the
State-Trait Anxiety Inventory and give a second sample of saliva. They will then be given
the test product and have another MRI, breath test and symptom questionnaire. Thereafter
they will be imaged with a range of MRI sequences at approximately hourly intervals for 5
hours. They will fill in the symptom questionnaire and give a breath sample every 30 minutes
for the first 2 hours, then at hourly intervals. After the last scan, breath test and
symptom report, participants will be offered lunch and are free to leave with a
questionnaire to complete on the following day.
SAMPLE SIZE AND JUSTIFICATION
Sample size was estimated to show the difference in reporting the symptoms (yes/no) between
glucose and fructose, and between glucose and fructans exposures in IBS patients.
Based on the previous work by Nelis et al.(1990) we suggest that 10% of the patients will
experience clinically important symptoms after glucose ingestion, 40 % after fructose or
fructans exposures. We set the power to 80% and significance level to 5%. No previous
information is available on within person correlation. If we consider the within-person
correlation to be 0.1 then we need 35 IBS patients, if the within-person correlation is 0.2
then we need 31 patients, and if 0.4 then 23 patients. We plan to gather complete datasets
from 30 IBS patients.
Pilot study on HV: for exploratory purposes we aim to collect data on 30 HV.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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