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UnknownNCT04501042

Investigation on the Role of Gut-liver Axis for Non-alcoholic Steatohepatitis Through Bariatric Surgery

Investigation on Novel Route of Gut Microbiota Products for Bariatric Surgery to Improve Non-alcoholic Steatohepatitis and Development on Therapeutic Implications

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
140 (estimated)
Sponsor
National Taiwan University Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common chronic liver disease. Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is an aggressive form of NAFLD with remarkable inflammatory features which may cause advanced fibrosis and liver cancer. So far there is no FDA-approved drug for treating NASH. A 10% weight loss by life style modification is a standard recommendation to treat NASH which achieves only 10-20% success rate in clinical practice. Thus, the development of therapeutics to prevent and treat NASH is certainly an unmet need. For now, the mechanism of how simple steatosis progresses to NASH remains unclear and accumulating evidences suggest the role of gut microbiota may be essential. Studies have also noted the bariatric surgery effectively improve diabetes and NASH with significant alterations in the composition and function of gut microbiome. In this study, the investigators aim to investigate the role of gut microbiota in the pathophysiology of NASH by comparing NAFLD severity, gut microbiome, metabolomics, immune profiles among patients before and after the bariatric surgery. With these efforts, the investigators wish to decipher the mechanism of how bariatric surgery may improve NASH through changing the gut microbiota and find out microbe-associated molecular signatures between NASH and NAFLD through this study.

Detailed description

The investigators anticipate to recruit 140 morbidly obese patients who will receive bariatric surgery including 100 patients receiving sleeve gastrectomy (SG) and 40 receiving gastric bypass surgery (GB). Liver biopsy will be performed during the operation to confirm the histological scores of NAFLD severity. The investigators expect to have 50% NASH and 50% NAFL patients from these morbidly obese patients based on previous domestic data. (i.e. 50 patients receiving SG to have NASH and 50 patients receiving SG to have NAFL; 20 patients receiving GB to have NASH and 20 patients receiving GB to have NAFL.) In this study, the investigators have two study objectives which are as follows. 1. The first objective is to discover potential mechanisms among gut-liver axis for preventing or promoting NAFL to NASH by comparing (1) fecal microbiome composition and metabolomics, (2) peripheral blood biochemistry, metabolomics, immune cell phenotypes, and cytokines (3) portal vein biochemistry, metabolomics, immune cell phenotypes, and cytokines (4) Liver metabolomics and RNA-seq (5) gut permeability test (lactulose/mannitol challenge) (6) host genetic susceptibility for NAFLD (PNPLA3 and TM6SF2) between the tissue-proved NASH and NAFL patients in this study with a cross-sectional comparison. 2. The second objective is to longitudinally investigate the potential mechanisms of bariatric surgery for improving NASH via a gut-microbiota dependent pathway. Clinical and experimental data before (baseline) and after (1st, 3rd, 6th months) bariatric surgery will be collected which include (1) non-invasive evaluation of NAFLD severity (Fibroscan, MRI-PDFF (proton density fat fraction) and MRE), (2) blood biochemistry, metabolomics, immune cell phenotypes, and cytokines (3) fecal microbiome and metabolomics (4) gut permeability test (5) liver biopsy histology (if available)

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREBariatric surgeryBariatric surgery

Timeline

Start date
2019-05-16
Primary completion
2024-04-01
Completion
2024-09-01
First posted
2020-08-06
Last updated
2022-09-27

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Taiwan

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04501042. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.