The Role of Gut Microbiota in Chronic GI Diseases: A Pilot Study

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Other
Study Type: Observational
SUMMARY

The study involves characterizing the microbiota of patients with IBS, functional diarrhea, IBD, severe motility disorders and celiac disease. This will be complemented by a translational phase of human-mouse hybrid experiments in which germ-free mice will be colonized with feces from these patients with different GI disease and non-disease controls and we will compare symptoms, microbiota composition and histological changes in the gut and in the brain of the mice.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 75
Healthy Volunteers: t
View:

• Diagnosis of IBD, active celiac disease (aTTG positive + endoscopic view and histological findings compatible), IBS (Rome IV criteria or physician diagnosis) severe motility disorders (severe constipation, severe functional dyspepsia) gluten sensitivity (IBS diarrhea predominant with positive anti gliadin antibodies and negative aTTG), functional diarrhea (Rome IV criteria), anal fissure and/or fistula or non-disease control individual or 1st degree family member of celiac patient.

• Willingness to participate

• Signed Informed Consent

Locations
Other Locations
Canada
McMaster University
RECRUITING
Hamilton
Contact Information
Primary
Premysl Bercik, MD
bercikp@mcmaster.ca
905 521 2100
Backup
Gaston Rueda, MD
ruedag@mcmaster.ca
9055212100
Time Frame
Start Date: 2012-10-01
Estimated Completion Date: 2026-11-01
Participants
Target number of participants: 260
Treatments
Chronic gastrointestinal disorders
A cohort of 260 patients (150 diagnosed with IBD, 40 with IBS, 30 with celiac disease, 10 with MC, 10 with functional diarrhea and 30 non-disease controls) of either sex between 18 and 75 years of age consulting to either the GI Clinical Investigation, the Endoscopy Unit (McMaster University)
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Leads: McMaster University

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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