This double-blinded proof-of-concept study is proposed to explore the effects of fecal microbiota transfer (FMT) in human subjects. Here we perform FMTs into obese recipients using stool from lean unoperated donors and from previously obese patients after successfull treatment with bariatric Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB) surgery. Obese patients treated with their own material (autologous FMT) serve as controls. After FMT treatment the functional impact of post-surgery microbiome changes on host energy consumption and regulation of blood glucose levels will be analysed. Additionally the variations on the microbiota and metabolite composition will be profiled using extensive sequencing analyses. The major aim of the study is to explore the scientific rationale for targeted gut microbiota modulation in management of obesity and related metabolic diseases.We estimate the transfer of microbiota from RYGB donors is superior to the transfer of lean microbiota at inducing reduced adiposity and improving high blood glucose levels in obese recipients. Each is better than a sham procedure (autologous FMT), which itself can also induce considerable short-term effects.
Patients and stool donors (for RYGB-/Lean-FMT-intervention groups) will be recruited at the Endocrinology outpatient clinic at the University Hospital of Graz. Patients will be randomized in a 1:1:1 manner. In all three study groups, patients will be treated with FMT totaling three times every 7 days after an antibiotic pretreatment. Patients randomized to the RYGB- FMT-intervention group will be treated with donor stool from previously obese patients successfully treated with RYGB surgery in terms of maintained weight reduction and improved glucose homeostasis. Patients randomized to Lean-FMT-intervention group will be treated with donor stool from un-operated, metabolically healthy and lean individuals, while patients randomized to the FMT-placebo group will be treated with autologous FMT. For both allogenic FMT interventions, the donor stool from five different patients successfully treated with RYGB surgery (for RYGB-FMT intervention) and from five un-operated, lean and healthy individuals (for Lean-FMT intervention), respectively, will be anaerobically processed before active study period and stored at - 20° C for analysis and subsequent FMT. In addition, stool from all 30 obese FMT recipients (FMT-intervention groups and FMT-placebo group) will be collected before the active study period, processed anaerobically and frozen at -80° C. Only stool samples from patients randomized to the FMT-placebo group (n=10) will be used as allogenic transplants.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
30
FMT is the transfer of fecal material containing gut microorganisms from a donor into the intestinal tract of a recipient
Department of Internal Medicine, Medical University Graz
Graz, Austria
RECRUITINGInsulin sensitivity
Change in insulin sensitivity after FMT compared to baseline as assessed by hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp technique
Time frame: after 6 weeks treatment
Insulin sensitivity
Change in insulin sensitivity after 16-/24-week treatment compared to baseline as assessed by hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp.
Time frame: after 16/24 weeks treatment
Glucose homeostasis
Change in glucose homeostasis compared to baseline as assessed by HOMA-IR model, fasting glucose level, and HbA1C value
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Body weight
Change in total body weight, body mass index (BMI) and body composition after 6-/16-/24-week treatment compared to baseline as assessed by Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, DXA)
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Blood pressure
Change in blood pressure and antihypertensive medication compared to baseline.
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Fasting lipid profile
Change in fasting lipid profile compared to baseline.
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Fasting blood liver enzyme levels
Change in fasting blood liver enzyme levels and liver fat content (assessed by CAP values with the XL probe) compared to baseline
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Dietary intake levels
Change in dietary intake assessed using MyFitnessPal compared to baseline.
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Metabolic inflammation
Change in metabolic inflammation and endotoxemia as assessed by circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-a, IL-6, IL-1ß) and bacterial endotoxins (lipopolysachharide (LPS), LPS-binding protein) compared to baseline
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Gut hormones
Change in postprandial release of gut hormones (PYY, GLP-1, GIP, ghrelin, CCK), insulin and bacterial metabolites (SCFA, Bile acids) before (fasting condition) and during a standardized mixed meal test (MMT) (Fresubin 200ml, 400kcal) compared to baseline
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Hunger and Satiety Scores
Change in Hunger and Satiety Scores assessed via visual analog scales during the MMT
Time frame: daily
Fecal microbiota composition
Change in diversity and composition of the fecal microbiota as assessed by 16S rRNA gene profiling compared to baseline
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Health-related quality of life
Change in health-related quality of life and behavior as assessed by established self-report questionnaires compared to baseline measuring: (a) eating behavior including trait food craving (FCQ-T-r), hedonic eating (PFS), restrained eating, overeating, and binge eating (EDE-Q), and emotional eating as well as disinhibition (EI); (b) personality factors such as impulsivity (BIS-15) and reward sensitivity (BIS/BAS); (c) mental and physical health, including depression, anxiety, and substance use (PHQ-D), attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ASRS), and quality of life (EQ-5D). All these questionnaires have established reliability and validity.
Time frame: after 6-/16-/24-week treatment
Tolerability of repeated FMT
Safety and tolerability of repeated FMT assessed by review of adverse event diary card
Time frame: daily
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