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Chemoprevention of Colorectal Cancer: the Role of Non-digestible Carbohydrates

Chemoprevention of Colorectal Cancer: the Role of Non-digestible Carbohydrates

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01214681
Enrollment
75
Registered
2010-10-05
Start date
2010-05-31
Completion date
2012-12-31
Last updated
2011-10-26

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Colorectal Cancer

Keywords

Biomarkers, Colorectal cancer, Resistant starch, Polydextrose, Non-digestible carbohydrate

Brief summary

Colorectal cancer is a common disease worldwide. It is now thought that colorectal cancer cells arise from stem cells where the genetic material regulating growth and division of the stem cell has become defective. This leads to unregulated production of cells which in turn have defective genetic information and cancer formation. Research into colorectal cancer is hampered by the fact that studies must take a very long time to produce results and be very large if the development of a cancer is the endpoint. Therefore alternative methods of quantifying the risk of developing a cancer are required so trials can be a realistic size and be completed in a realistic time frame. The investigators have previously identified several candidates for these 'biomarkers'. The next stage in proving or disproving these as useful biomarkers is to test their response to a dietary agent that the investigators know reduces the risk of colon cancer.

Detailed description

This project is designed to enhance understanding of links between food and the health of the gut. The particular purpose of the project is to investigate the impact of a well-defined intervention in human volunteers on a panel of novel, and established, diet-related biomarkers of bowel cancer risk. We have developed a number of novel biomarkers of diet-related CRC risk measured in colo-rectal mucosal biopsies (and in stool). These biomarkers include differentially expressed proteins, DNA methylation markers and inflammation markers. In our on-going BORICC Study we are investigating the relationships between dietary exposure and nutritional status for these biomarkers in a cross-sectional study. The next logical step in this research is to determine whether a selected panel of the most promising biomarkers responds to a dietary intervention i.e. to test their utility as biomarkers of GI health and potential as surrogate endpoints in future human studies. We propose to use Hi-maize 260 and polydextrose (PD) as our model resistant starch (RS) intervention agents. RS describes the fraction of dietary starch which is not digested in the small bowel and which flows to the colon where it is a substrate for bacterial fermentation. (Asp, 1996) PD is produced by the bulk melt polycondensation of glucose and sorbitol to produce an oligosaccharide with a mean degree of polymerisation of 12 which is resistant to mammalian GI enzymes and, like other RSs, is a substrate for bacterial fermentation. (Auerbach, 2007) Both Hi-maize and PD are fermented (to a greater or lesser extent) producing short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) including butyrate. (Asp, 1996) Butyrate has beneficial effects on gut physiology and immune function including anti-inflammatory effects. (Wächtershäuser, 2000; Dronamraju, 2009) In the present project we will investigate the impact of PD and RS, as food-borne substrates for delivery of butyrate, on biomarkers of bowel cancer risk.

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTMaltodextrin and Amioca starch

12g Maltodextrin and 23g Amioca starch daily in divided doses for 50 days. Provided as a powder to be added to food or drink.

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTHi-maize 260

23g Hi-maize 260 and 12g Maltodextrin daily in divided doses for 50 days. Provided as a powder to be added to food or drink.

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTPolydextrose

12g polydextrose and 23g amioca starch daily in divided doses for 50 days. Provided as a powder to be added to food or drink.

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTHi-maize 260 and polydextrose

12g polydextrose and 23g Hi-maize 260 daily in divided doses for 50 days. Provided as a powder to be added to food or drink.

Sponsors

Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
CollaboratorOTHER
Newcastle University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
FACTORIAL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
16 Years to 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Attended for flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy and no macroscopic pathology identified

Exclusion criteria

* Age \<16 or \>85 * Familial polyposis syndrome * Lynch syndrome * Known colorectal tumour * Previous colorectal resection * Pregnancy * Chemotherapy in last 6 months * Therapy with aspirin/other NSAID * Other immunosuppressive medication * Active colonic inflammation at endoscopy * Incomplete left sided examination * Colorectal carcinoma found at endoscopy * Iatrogenic perforation at endoscopy * Colorectal cancer on histology * Warfarin or other anticoagulant use * Diabetes mellitus * Crohn's disease * Cognitive impairment

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Faecal calprotectin concentration50 days

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Faecal bacterial abundance and population50 days
Faecal short chain fatty acid concentration50 days
Urinary short chain fatty acid concentration50 days
Plasma short chain fatty acid concentration50 days
COX 2 expression in mucosal biopsies50 days
Number and distribution of mitotic and apoptotic cells within colonic crypts (mucosal cell kinetics)50 days
Faecal pH50 days
Cellular GADD45A RNA expression50 days
Target gene methylation (p16, GSTP1, RARβ2, CDH1 GATA4 APC, SFRP1, 2, 4 and 5, AXIN2, DKK1 and WIF1)50 days
Global genetic methylation50 days
Cellular protein biomarker (CK8) expression50 days
Serum C reactive protein concentration50 days
Cellular CDK 4 RNA expression50 days

Countries

United Kingdom

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 11, 2026