To hear about similar clinical trials, please enter your email below
Trial Title:
Reducing Metabolic Dysregulation in Dyads
NCT ID:
NCT06117241
Condition:
Colorectal Cancer
Inflammation
Nutrition Related Cancer
Conditions: Official terms:
Colorectal Neoplasms
Inflammation
Conditions: Keywords:
Body Composition
Cancer
Digestive System
Microbiome
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
N/A
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention model:
Parallel Assignment
Primary purpose:
Prevention
Masking:
Single (Participant)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Behavioral
Intervention name:
IMAGINE HEALTHY
Description:
An anti-inflammatory nutrition program including cooking classes, physical activity, and
stress reduction.
Arm group label:
Intervention
Summary:
This study is a 6-month randomized controlled trail of diet modification designed to
reduce chronic inflammation and reverse metabolic dysfunction among obese individuals
with one or more polyps found at a colonoscopy screening. We also will recruit an at
least overweight partner, who lives in the same household. To be eligible, participants
will be apparently disease-free, obese AAs or EAs who have self-identified a partner who
is at least 9 years, with whom they live and who also is at least overweight. Each index
participant will: 1) Be AA or EA by self-report; 2) Be ≤55 years old; 3) Have undergone a
colonoscopy screening and found to have ≥1 polyp(s); 4) Be free of co-morbid conditions
or other factors that would limit participation in this trial; 5) Have a BMI ≥30kg/m2; 6)
Be willing to commit to investing the time and effort required to participate in this
trial (i.e., willing to complete all assessments and provide biological samples as
specified in the consent); and 7) Have no recent antibiotic use. Their partner needs to:
1) Be at least 9 years old; 2) Live in the same household and consumes meals together; 3)
Be at least overweight; 4) Agree to all study procedures, including provision of
biological samples, body measurements, and self-reported dietary and other assessments;
and 5) Have no recent antibiotic use.
Detailed description:
This project leverages our expertise in the epidemiology of colorectal cancer (CRC);
disparities; obesity; metabolic dysregulation, an important manifestation of
inflammation; the microbiome; animal CRC models; and lifestyle intervention trials to
address the growing problem of Early-Onset CRC (EOCRC) (i.e., <50 years). Adiposity and
diet drive metabolic dysregulation. So, understanding the interaction between diet and
adiposity are key to understanding the genesis of EOCRC - and an array of other
obesity-related cancers. This project will address the absence of critical clinical
trials and mechanistic studies involving lifestyle interventions for EOCRC. We intend to
address this gap; and have the transdisciplinary team representing complementary
backgrounds to do so. We focus on dietary modulation of gut microbes to reduce
metaflammation and subsequent metabolic dysfunction in obesity, with a goal of preventing
EOCRC. We will perform an anti-inflammatory dietary intervention trial in dyads of adults
and children at elevated risk for CRC. We also will conduct a complementary mechanistic
animal study that builds on and leverages our expertise in mechanistic studies on obesity
and CRC. This work is supported by infrastructure that we have built over the past
decades in two key centers at the University of South Carolina (USC): (1) Center for
Colon Cancer Research (CCCR, 2002 - present - which specializes in mouse models of CRC);
and (2) the Cancer Prevention and Control Program (CPCP, 2003 - present - which
specializes in the epidemiology of cancer and lifestyle intervention trials for cancer,
with a focus on cancer disparities). The two projects that comprise the proposed grant
address two Specific Aims that are represented by the human study and laboratory animal
experiment: i.e. ,1: To establish the metabolic protective effects of an
anti-inflammatory diet in obese, high-risk African-American (AA) and European-American
(EA) adults and children in reducing inflammation as indicated by Homeostatic Model
Assessment for Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR), IGF-1, Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha (TNFα),
Interleukin 6 (IL-6), and C-Reactive Protein (CRP), and a creating more favorable
microbiome signature; 2: To establish gut microbes as mediators between anti-inflammatory
dietary input and reversal of metabolic dysfunction and associated CRC risk. This
complements the human study by carrying out pre-clinical murine model studies with
similar inputs (diet), intermediate endpoints (inflammation, microbiome), and outcomes
(CRC-related). We hypothesize that an anti-inflammatory dietary intervention will reduce
metabolic dysfunction and metainflammation through regulatory effects on gut microbiota.
Results from this work will address the role of metabolic dysregulation in relation to
factors that are known to be important in carcinogenesis, that therefore could have
profound effects on EOCRC, have implications for other obesity-related cancers, and have
great promise for moving the field forward by addressing mechanisms that drive large
health-related disparities that consistently disfavor African Americans.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Individuals eligible to participate in this study will be apparently disease- free, obese
(BMI ≥ 30kg/m2) AAs or EAs who have self-identified a partner who is at least 9 years
old, with whom they live and who also is at least overweight. Each index patient will: 1)
Be AA or EA by self-report; 2) Be ≤55 years old; 3) Have agreed to undergo colonoscopy
screening and found to have ≥1 polyp(s) that place them at elevated risk for future
adenomas and CRC; 4) Be free of co-morbid conditions or other factors that would limit
participation in this trial; 5) Have a BMI ≥30kg/m2; 6) Be willing to commit to investing
the time and effort required to participate in this trial (i.e., willing to complete all
assessments and provide biological samples as specified in the consent); and 7) Have no
recent antibiotic use (≤3 months). Their dyad partner needs to: 1) Be at least 9 years
old; 2) Live in the same household and consumes meals together; 3) Be at least
overweight; 4) Agree to all study procedures, including provision of biological samples,
anthropometric measurements, and self-reported dietary and other assessments; 5) Have no
recent antibiotic use (≤3 months).
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
9 Years
Maximum age:
55 Years
Healthy volunteers:
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
University of South Carolina
Address:
City:
Columbia
Zip:
29208
Country:
United States
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
James R Hebert, ScD
Phone:
803-576-5613
Email:
jhebert@sc.edu
Contact backup:
Last name:
Gauri Sathe
Phone:
803-576-5613
Email:
satheg@mailbox.sc.edu
Start date:
October 17, 2023
Completion date:
July 2027
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
University of South Carolina
Agency class:
Other
Source:
University of South Carolina
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06117241