Colon Cancer Clinical Trial
Ellagic Acid, Urolithin and Colonic Microbial Communities Affected by Walnut Consumption
Summary
Briefly, this is a 28-day dietary intervention study participants will be asked to eat 2 ounces (52 grams) of walnuts every day for 3 weeks, and at the end of the study period they will come in for a colonoscopy. Participants will first start a 1-week run-in period where they will be asked to avoid foods high in ellagic acid. In addition, they will be asked to complete food surveys and two sets of 3-day dietary records, and to provide colon biopsies for this study during their routine colonoscopy, as well as a blood, and two urine and stool samples. Urine samples will be used for analysis of urolithin, ellagic acid metabolites. Stool samples will be used to assess gut microbiota changes after walnut consumption. Dietary records will be used for compliance and Food Frequency Questionnaire will be used to assess dietary habits. Lastly, the biopsy samples will be used for analysis of biomarkers and anti-inflammatory in the colon, as well as adherent microbiome to the colonic tissue. Data will be analyzed based on the urolithin phenotypes.
Full Description
The investigators propose to address the influence of ellagic acid obtained from walnuts and its microbial-derived metabolites (urolithin) on the gut microbiome and inflammation-related biomarkers in a human clinical study. Patients will be enrolled and detailed demographic and dietary information, biopsy specimens through colonoscopies, as well as fecal, blood and urine samples will be collected. The wide range of gut urolithin levels provides the rationale for our proposed studies. Will the specific urolithin phenotypes show a disparate range of chemopreventive (anti-inflammatory) response to walnut consumption? The hypothesis is that walnut ingestion in "Phenotype A" participants (producing the highest levels of urolithin) will be associated with a beneficial anti-inflammatory response as tested in colonic mucosa and a higher abundance of bacterial species associated with ellagic acid metabolism. Although 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid gene (rRNA) sequencing allows inexpensive bacterial identification at the genus/species level, a whole genome sequencing (mWGS) will be employed to achieve finer classification (strain level), and identify other microbes (e.g., viruses, fungi, small eukaryotes). Furthermore, mWGS targets the entire genome of each microbe (not just the 16S rRNA gene), allowing for construction of a microbial gene catalogue, including a metabolic pathway description for each sample. This will characterize the functional potential of the microbial community. Ultimately, the proposed studies will inform the application of prebiotic to enhance the formation of urolithin metabolites from ellagic acid for the prevention of inflammation-associated Colorectal Cancer, a development that would have significant translational implications.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Men or women between the ages of 50-65 years old who are scheduled to undergo a routine screening colonoscopy
English speaking/reading patients willing and able to provide written informed consent for study participation
Patients willing to consume walnuts for 3 weeks
Willingness to comply with all study requirements
Exclusion Criteria:
Current active malignancy, previous history of gastrointestinal malignancy, or altered gastrointestinal anatomy
Current evidence or previous history of ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease
HIV infection, chronic viral hepatitis
Allergy to walnuts or hypersensitivity to tree nuts
Use of antibiotics within the past month
Individuals with blood coagulation disorders or on anti-coagulant therapy
Treated with steroids, immunosuppressive agents or other anti-inflammatory drugs one week prior to starting intervention
Non-English-speaking patients who require an interpreter to give consent
Patients residing in the Department of Correction
Inability to comply with the protocol requirements
Any other condition that, in the opinion of the PI, might interfere with study objectives
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There is 1 Location for this study
Farmington Connecticut, 06030, United States
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