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RecruitingNCT06833541

Research on Gut Microbiota and Metabolomics in Diabetic Kidney Disease

Research on Gut-kidney Axis Regulation of Diabetic Kidney Disease Based on Multi-omics and Bacterio-drug Interaction Control Mechanism

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
720 (estimated)
Sponsor
The First Affiliated Hospital of Hunan University of Traditional Chinese Medicine · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is characterized by high prevalence, multiple pathogenesis, and lack of effective treatment and management strategies. Early detection helps overcome treatment inertia, enables timely medical intervention, maximizes renal function in diabetic patients, and is essential to avoid renal failure and improve clinical outcomes. The gold standard for diagnosis of DKD is renal biopsy, which has the highest accuracy. However, due to the trauma of renal biopsy, the patient acceptance is low, the application scenario is not universal, and it is only used when it is difficult to distinguish diabetic nephropathy from non-diabetic nephropathy, and it is not the preferred diagnostic method for DKD. In the past decade, with the emergence and application of metabonomics, proteomics, genomics and other multi-omics techniques, more and more studies have recognized the prominent role of intestinal flora disorders and gut-derived metabolites in the occurrence of DKD. Therefore, from the perspective of intestinal flora, using multi-omics techniques to identify enterogenic metabolic markers of DKD and restore intestinal flora balance may be potential strategies for prevention and management of DKD. Modern medicine believes that intestinal flora is not only closely related to diet and digestion, participating in the synthesis, absorption and metabolism of nutrients, but also constituting intestinal barrier and participating in immune defense of the body. Its function is similar to the physiological function of "The spleen governs transportation and transformation". Based on the traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) pathogenesis of DKD "Spleen Failure to Disperse Essence and Poison Damage Kidney Collateral" proposed by the previous research group, this study intends to use microbiology-metabolomics to deeply study the TCM pathogenesis of DKD, provide scientific basis for it, and guide the theory of traditional Chinese medicine widely used in clinical work of prevention and treatment of diabetic nephropathy.

Detailed description

This study is a single-center, parallel trial design. It is prepared to recruit subjects with type 2 diabetes kidney disease (DKD), Type 2 diabetes mellitus(T2DM), chronic kidney disease (CKD), and healthy individuals based on clinical diagnostic criteria and screening criteria. While observing main indicators such as blood glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin, and renal function, blood, urine, feces, and tongue coating samples are collected and frozen. The 16S rDNA technology, metagenomics technology, targeted and non-targeted metabolomics technology are used to detect the results and analyze the differences. Subsequently, based on the detection results, 4-6 remaining fecal samples from each group will be selected as human-intestinal flora donors for "human-germ-free mouse" faecal microbiota transplantation.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2022-04-18
Primary completion
2025-02-28
Completion
2025-12-01
First posted
2025-02-18
Last updated
2025-02-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06833541. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.