Irritable Bowel Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Molecular Phenotyping of IBS Subtypes
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a condition characterized by abdominal pain, bloating,
constipation, diarrhea and gas and affects up to 15% of the Western population. In many
individuals with IBS, symptoms can be triggered by foods, such as FODMAPs (easily fermentable
dietary fiber containing Fermentable Oligosaccharides, Disaccharides, Monosaccharides, and
Polyols). Some individuals with IBS may also benefit from a gluten-free diet. Current
subtypes of IBS are based on symptoms (constipation, diarrhea, and mixed), rather than
mechanistic differences. Another promising approach for identifying IBS subtypes is based on
grouping individuals into similar metabolic phenotypes, i.e. metabotypes, that share
similarities in metabolism and metabolic regulation in response to specific foods. Health and
wellbeing could potentially be improved by personalized treatment through tailoring diet to
subjects with different IBS subtypes.
To investigate this hypothesis, the investigators will conduct an intervention study on
subjects with IBS and identify specific food susceptibilities based on metabolic phenotype
(metabotype). In total, 120 women and men with moderate to severe IBS will be recruited.
Gluten intolerance, other gastrointestinal disease and abdominal surgery will constitute
exclusion criteria. The study will be performed in a double-blind, randomized,
placebo-controlled cross-over study design. Study participants will receive three 1-week
diets with additions of either FODMAPs, gluten or an inert control with 1-week washout
in-between. IBS metabotypes will be identified by integrative multivariate analysis of
molecular phenotype data from metabolomics and microbiota measurements combined with data on
bowel habits and stomach discomfort. Study participants will also be subjected to a cocktail
provocation containing FODMAPs and gluten to develop a rapid diagnostic test based on
identified plasma metabolomic biomarkers of IBS metabotypes.
The current study is explorative with the primary aim to find and relate distinct subject
metabotypes reflecting tolerance/intolerance to specific food components among IBS-patients
by deducing and relating OMICs data patterns (metabolomics and gut microbiota data) to
reported severity of IBS-symptoms indicated by the primary endpoint variable, i.e. IBS-SSS.
Since the investigators don't have an estimation of the variation in the multivariate
OMICs-data (both metabolomics and 16S rRNA analysis of bacterial RNA), it is not possible to
perform an adequate power-calculation. There is a lack of consensus on how to best perform
power analysis for these OMICs-designs (and therefore also a lack of tools), although some
initiatives have been published. Power analysis is especially difficult in untargeted
metabolomics, where the number of variables are not a priori determined, where there is
strong multi-colinearity and where variables cannot be assumed to contribute with equal power
to effect size. Moreover, there is a shortage of relevant untargeted metabolomics and
microbiota study material on IBS x diet interactions from which to estimate relevant
parameters such as multivariate effect sizes and variance estimates, due to the surprisingly
few metabolomics studies on IBS and the total lack of publicly available raw data. However,
significant differences in the metabolome was previously observed in children with or without
diarrhea-dominant IBS (n=22 per group). Systematic differences were also shown in individual
metabolites in persons with IBS consuming either a high or low FODMAP diet (n≈20 per
treatment).
In this study, a cross-over design will be performed, which will increase the power compared
to parallel designs. Moreover, participants will be stratified with respect to subtype of IBS
(i.e. diarrhea, constipation and mixed). However, the investigators will not know in advance
how many IBS-metabotypes will be present in the material or the quantitative distribution
between the metabotypes. Therefore, 120 participants will be recruited to be able to observe
significant differences between dietary treatments, based on the assumptions that it will be
possible to identify around 4±1 metabotypes, and an approximate equal distribution between
metabotypes (≥20 persons per metabotype). In addition, a selection of 120 participants will,
under these conditions allow for 20% drop-out from the study, which is a high estimate based
on our previous experience from nutritional interventions. An important secondary outcome
from this study material is that it will give the opportunity to be used for power
calculations in future OMICs-studies where the effect sizes on both clinical parameters and
OMICs-measures are uncertain.
Discovery of IBS metabotypes Identification of metabotypes will be performed using
predominantly multivariate data analytical techniques. During initial analyses, molecular
phenotype data (metabolomics and microbiota) will be analyzed using unsupervised principal
component analysis (PCA) and clustering techniques to investigate whether data
self-aggregates into meaningful clusters. To adjust for between-individual variability and
focus on the effects of interventions, variance partitioning (sometimes referred to as ANOVA
decomposition) by individual will be performed. Clusters will be correlated with recorded
IBS/clinical data (IBS-SSS, bowel emptying diary) to examine whether emerging clusters
contain functional information in relation to IBS symptoms. Moreover, it is likely that
different clusters are not similarly reflected in plasma and fecal metabolomics and fecal
microbiota. To investigate to which extent the different clusters are associated with the
different omics blocks, a series of techniques for subdivision of variability into common and
distinct components will be applied to the unsupervised analysis.
In a second line of unsupervised analysis, PCA and clustering analyses will be performed on
molecular phenotype aggregated with IBS/clinical data, which will have the potential to
influence clustering directly instead of investigating correlations afterwards. Again,
subdivision of variability into common and distinct components will be applied to examine how
clusters are reflected in the different data blocks.
Finally, supervised analyses will be used to directly associate molecular phenotype data
(independent variables) with IBS/clinical data (dependent variables) using in-house developed
partial least squares (PLS) and random forest (RF) techniques. These in-house techniques are
specifically adapted to identifying the most relevant set of independent variables to
describe the covariability with the dependent data (submitted manuscript). IBS/clinical data
can be used both as continuous multiple variables or directly by converting observations to
clusters. To examine how clusters and IBS/clinical data are reflected in the different omics
blocks, newly developed procedures to find common and distinct components in supervised
analysis will be applied (submitted manuscript).
The progression in these three approaches represent an increasing degree of supervision in
multivariate analysis. After all analyses, emerging clusters from the PCA and clustering
analyses and multivariate predictions from the PLS and RF analyses will further analyzed
using bioinformatics tools adapted to provide meaningful biological interpretation with the
aim to confirm correspondence between clusters and metabotypes.
Rapid diagnostic test of metabotypes After metabotypes have been identified, multivariate
predictive analysis of the mixed gluten/FODMAP exposure will be performed to identify
predictive biomarkers of metabotypes. These models will similarly as above be based on
in-house PLS and RF procedures using metabolomics data as independent variables and
metabotype classification per individual as dependent variable.
Plasma metabolic profiles will be analyzed regularly up to 4 hours post exposure and two
different approaches will be undertaken to address the time-trends in metabolic profiling: In
a first approach, time profiles will be converted to areas-under-the-curve per measured
metabolite feature through numerical integration. These values will then be used directly as
independent variables to give an indication of overall reflection of metabotype on metabolite
levels after exposure. However, this direct approach will not be able to take into
consideration potential differences in time-trends between metabotypes. Therefore, variance
partitioning hyphenated with supervised learning will be used to investigate metabotype x
time interactions. This approach will require method development in multivariate analysis,
which is currently underway in the R Landbergs research group and expected to be ready and
beta-tested during 2018, i.e. before data is available for analysis. This methodology is
projected to allow for simultaneous analysis of overall differences in metabolite levels
between treatments as well as differences in time profiles, thereby giving information also
on the most opportune time points to draw samples for effective prediction of metabotype x.
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