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Impact of Diet on the Microbiome-Immune-Brain Axis in Parkinson's Disease

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Parkinson Disease
Interventions
Behavioral: 8 week predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-diet program
Behavioral: maintenance of the predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-diet
Registration Number
NCT06463769
Lead Sponsor
University of Kiel
Brief Summary

Habitual adherence to a predominantly plant-based diet, rich in low-processed food (LPF) has been associated with a reduced risk for development and slower progression of Parkinson's Disease (PD). This could be due to neuroprotective effects by modulation of the gut microbiota and decreased neuronal and metabolic inflammation. So far, the effect of a predominantly plant-based LPF-diet on the microbiome-immune-brain axis in patients with PD remains unknown. In addition, the influence of dietetic measures on the gut microbiome is variable and may depend on (long-term) adherence as well as on PD-specific factors and lifestyle.

The investigators hypothesize that compared to an average German diet, the predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-diet, as a culturally adapted diet, which is rich in fermentable fiber and phytochemicals, will have beneficial effects on the gut microbiome of patients with PD by increasing the abundance of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria (primary outcome) and will improve gut motility, metabolic resilience, and inflammation (secondary outcomes). Furthermore, the investigators postulate that a patient-centered dietary intervention program, including a multifaceted patient education and supported by a web-application, will lead to high adherence as a key determinant of long-term changes in the gut microbiome. This dietary intervention will be accepted by patients as a low-threshold treatment that balances personal benefits, therapeutic barriers and ethical concerns of early risk disclosure in PD.

Detailed Description

In a pilot-intervention study, our project will:

* develop a practical, low-threshold diet intervention for patients with prodromal and clinical PD. Adherence will be promoted (i) by a patient-oriented approach, (ii) by implementation of the predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-diet that is scientifically-based, culturally adapted, sustainable and culinary and (iii) by an innovative web-application.

* investigate the acute effects of the predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF -diet on the microbiome (abundance of SCFA-producing bacteria), gastrointestinal motility, inflammation as well as metabolic and Parkinson-specific clinical outcomes in individuals with prodromal and clinical PD.

* investigate potential determinants of long-term changes in the gut microbiome (e.g. dietary adherence, gastrointestinal motility, meal timing and frequency), and factors associated with a high adherence (e.g. acceptance of diet as therapeutic intervention in the prodromal phase, health-related quality of life).

The patient-centered intervention program will be tailored to individual needs and preferences of individuals with prodromal and clinical PD. It will be designed to impart knowledge (e.g. on sustainability and health effects) and food literacy (e.g. food merchandize and culinary skills) in group meetings and culinary medicine workshops. Recipe suggestions and shopping guides will consider individual abilities and needs and a web-application is used for information, increasing self-efficacy, motivation, and monitoring. To ensure an easy integration of the diet into everyday life, partners will be included in the program, if applicable. Moreover, cultural preferences as well as financial resources will be considered. Regular feedback using statistics on nutrient intake and overall progress will be implemented to encourage adherence.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
75
Inclusion Criteria
  • patients with probable prodromal PD (according to predefined criteria)
  • patients with clinical PD with slight to moderate disease severity (Hoehn & Yahr 1-2.5)
  • habitual Western Diet (≥30% of energy intake from ultra-processed food)
Exclusion Criteria
  • current adherence to a plant-based diet
  • food allergies or intolerances
  • significant diseases of the gastrointestinal system (e.g. celiac disease) or central nervous system, diabetes mellitus
  • underweight (BMI <18.5 kg/m2)
  • active smoking
  • expected changes in medication or antibiotic treatment during the intervention

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Patients with prodromal PD on New Nordic LPF-diet (intervention)maintenance of the predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-dietPatients with prodromal PD will take part in an 8-week patient-centered intervention program on a predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-Diet.
Patients with prodromal PD on New Nordic LPF-diet (intervention)8 week predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-diet programPatients with prodromal PD will take part in an 8-week patient-centered intervention program on a predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-Diet.
Patients with clinical PD on New Nordic LPF-diet (intervention)maintenance of the predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-dietPatients with clinical PD will take part in an 8-week patient-centered intervention program on a predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-Diet. Patients with clinical PD will be randomized to intervention or control group.
Patients with clinical PD on New Nordic LPF-diet (intervention)8 week predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-diet programPatients with clinical PD will take part in an 8-week patient-centered intervention program on a predominantly plant-based New Nordic LPF-Diet. Patients with clinical PD will be randomized to intervention or control group.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
abundance of key SCFA-producing gut bacteriapre vs. post intervention (8 weeks) + pre intervention vs. follow-up 6 months after completion of intervention

analysis of stool samples

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
systemic inflammation markerspre vs. post intervention (8 weeks) + pre intervention vs. follow-up 6 months after completion of intervention

hsCRP and IL-6 in serum

energy balancepre vs. post intervention (8 weeks) + pre intervention vs. follow-up 6 months after completion of intervention

changes in body weight

metabolic resiliencepre vs. post intervention (8 weeks)

modeling of one parameter (metabolic resilience) including information on postprandial glucose, insulin, triglycerides and NEFA following a mixed meal tolerance test

energy partitioningpre vs. post intervention (8 weeks) + pre intervention vs. follow-up 6 months after completion of intervention

changes in body composition

gastrointestinal peptide-hormonespre vs. post intervention (8 weeks)

ghrelin, GLP-1, PYY

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Kiel University, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein

🇩🇪

Kiel, Germany

Institute of Human Nutrition

🇩🇪

Kiel, Germany

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