Many people with Cystic Fibrosis (CF) are troubled by symptoms from their stomach and bowels: their gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Symptoms affect quality of life and can also reduce people's ability to digest enough calories to remain healthy, leaving them undernourished and less able to deal with other health problems such as infection. Clinical tests to assess bowel function are limited. Many tests involve inserting a sensor or camera into the bowel, so they are not suitable for long periods, and can be uncomfortable. In Nottingham the investigators have developed imaging scans which can assess how someone's digestion works without any invasive device. The type of scanning the investigators use is called Magnetic Resonance Imaging, or MRI. The purpose of this study is to see if those scanning methods can be used in people with CF to understand their digestion and any problems they have.
This is a small pilot study to establish that differences in digestion between people with and without CF can be quantified by repeated MR scans in fasted participants in response to standardised meals. Participants will complete questionnaires on gastrointestinal function and symptoms: the PAC-SYM questionnaire, validated to assess symptom burden in adults with chronic constipation; and the CF abdomen questionnaire, developed in German for use in young people and adults with cystic fibrosis. After this, participants only need to attend one study day at the Sir Peter Mansfield Imaging Centre. On this day they will be asked to withhold any medicines specifically targeted to alter bowel habit. This shall include laxatives but not enzyme replacement therapy. They should attend on the study day having fasted since waking, other than water for essential medicines. They will have their first MRI scan fasted. After the scan they will eat a standard test meal, and be scanned again first at half hour, then hour intervals until six hours after the first meal. The final scan will constitute the end of the study for each participant. Each session in the MRI scanner will last around 15 minutes. After each scan they will complete a validated rating scale for any current symptoms: the Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale (GSRS).In between scans, participants will have access to a lounge with wifi and a television. Infection control requirements mean that the investigators are unable to scan more than one patient with CF on a single day. Patient scans will alternate with those of a Control participant. The investigators will aim to frequency match Controls with Patients for age and gender.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
25
Repeated MRI scans imaging digestion of standard meals
Nottingham University Hospitals National Health Service Trust
Nottingham, United Kingdom
Orocaecal Transit Time
time taken after eating for ingested food to be identifiable in the caecum on MRI
Time frame: 1 day of scanning
Gastric Half Emptying Times
volume of stomach at each time point of digestion to measure speed of gastric emptying (time taken for half the gastric contents to be emptied)
Time frame: 1 day of scanning
Small Bowel Water Content (Corrected for Body Surface Area)
volume of water content in small bowel representing secretions (area under the curve - timepoints at baseline then 0,30,60,90,120,150,180,240,300,360 minutes)
Time frame: 1 day of scanning
Colonic Volume (Corrected for Body Surface Area)
volume of colon representing ease of chyme passage through colon (area under the curve - timepoints at baseline then 0,30,60,90,120,150,180,240,300,360 minutes)
Time frame: 1 day of scanning
Gastrointestinal Symptoms
gastrointestinal symptoms as measured by questionnaires to monitor relationship with outcomes measured by MRI. Scale of the CFAbd-score ranges from 0-100. A low score indicates fewer gastrointestinal symptoms whilst a higher score indicates more severe and frequent gastrointestinal symptoms.
Time frame: 1 day of scanning
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