Clinical Trials

Intestinal Microecology in Chronic Constipation

Location:

Trial status:

Inactive

Why is this study being done?

Chronic constipation is a common condition with a heterogeneous pathophysiology and resulting clinical manifestations. Recent evidence in the literature and collected in our laboratory confirm that there are differences in the gut microbiota between healthy individuals and those with a variety of disorders (e.g., inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome and obesity) suggesting that the development of certain disorders may be determined by the composition of the gut microbiota. Existing evidence warrants further investigation of the role of the microbial ecology of the human gut in constipation and an exploration of modification of the gut microbiota as a means to treat constipation by its actions on the colonic metabolism of nutrient substrates to alter colonic transit and fluid fluxes.

The proposed research will exploit our proven capability to use high-throughput molecular genomic techniques to define the intestinal microbiome in order to help define the role of the gut microbiota in chronic constipation and will explore the potential value of altering the microbiota as a management strategy in constipation. The linkage of high-throughput genomic analyses with cause-and-effect understanding of how the gut microbiota affects bowel function may lead to a reliable means to manage the gut microbiota with the intent to prevent and/or treat constipation. The immediate goals of this project are to expand on existing information about the microbial ecology in the human intestines focusing on its relationship with constipation using molecular microbiological techniques and to assess the effects on the gut microorganisms resulting from the use of the FDA-approved medication, lubiprostone. Lubiprostone is a member of a novel therapeutic class called prostones and is an orally active, bicyclic fatty acid that selectively acts on type 2 chloride channels to stimulate chloride secretion which induces a net increase in luminal fluid secretion. Unlike antibiotic, probiotic and prebiotic agents, it has no known direct effects on the gut microbiota. It is FDA-approved for the treatment of chronic constipation in men and women and for women with constipation-predominant IBS (C-IBS). The rationale for using lubiprostone to modify the gut microbiota stems from the use of similar strategies for controlling recalcitrant small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (i.e., altering fluid fluxes in the gut lumen).

We believe that this research will greatly improve our understanding of the role that the gut microbiota play in the development of constipation and potentially lead to new strategies with which to combat this common problem.

Who is eligible to participate?

Inclusion Criteria for Healthy Subjects:

1. Fewer than 3 bowel movements/day and more than 3 bowel movements/week without the need for significant straining with defecation or frequent sensation of incomplete evacuation after defecation

2. Absence of current or chronic gastrointestinal symptoms

Inclusion Criteria for Chronic Constipation Subjects:

1. Meet Rome III criteria for chronic functional constipation

2. Colonoscopy within the previous 10 years for subjects ≥ 50 years of age

Inclusion Criteria for Constipation-Predominant IBS Patients:

1. Meet Rome III criteria for C-IBS

2. Colonoscopy within the previous 10 years for subjects ≥ 50 years of age

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Prior gastrointestinal surgery that altered the anatomy of the esophagus, stomach, or small/large intestine (exceptions include appendectomy and cholecystectomy)

2. Gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, endocrine, renal, or other chronic disease likely to affect gastrointestinal motility (e.g., uncontrolled diabetes mellitus)

3. Females of childbearing age who are not practicing birth control and/or are pregnant or lactating (a urine pregnancy test will be performed on female subjects prior to lubiprostone use)

4. Significant untreated psychiatric disease

5. History of hypersensitivity reaction or intolerance to lubiprostone

6. Inability to stop antibiotics, probiotics, and fiber supplements 1 month prior to stool sample collection

7. Inability to stop proton pump inhibitors, histamine 2 receptor antagonists, prokinetic agents, narcotic analgesic agents, laxatives, and anticholinergic agents 2 weeks prior to stool sample collection

Last updated: 04/22/2013

NCT ID: NCT00934479

IRB Number:09-001281