Effects of Fish Oil on the Colon Mucosa
- Conditions
- Physiological Effects of Fish Oil
- Interventions
- Dietary Supplement: Fish OIl
- Registration Number
- NCT01860352
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Michigan
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to see what effects the dietary supplement called Omega-3 or "Fish Oil" and it has on your colon, if any. Omega-3 (Fish Oil) is available in many forms (pills, capsules, liquid) in grocery stores, health food/vitamin stores and drug stores and from eating fish. We would like to learn if different amounts of Fish Oil specifically chosen for you individually change your colon tissue (large intestine). We hope that Fish Oil may be useful in the future as something that may help to prevent colon cancer, but we don't have any research in humans that shows that yet. We have to do this study first to see if Fish Oil effects the colon. One type of Fish Oil is has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to reduce the risk of heart disease. We are going to test a different Fish Oil supplement made by a company called Nordic Naturals.
The colon lining or "mucosa" comes in contact with all the undigested things we eat or drink as it passes out to waste (stool). Animal studies suggest that fish oil may help the colon lining by reducing colon polyps and therefore colon cancer. We think this happens through chemical changes in the colon lining and also in the blood. The chemicals that we are looking at are called "fatty acids". We want to see if taking different amounts fish oil chosen for you changes these chemicals (fatty acids) in your colon or your blood. We will assign you a personal "low dose" of fish oil to take for 2 weeks, followed by a "high dose, or maximum" dose for 2 weeks. We will calculate your basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) from your height, weight, age and assess your activity factor. We have a table that then tells us your target low and high dose. Then, based on your blood samples, we figure out which target dose is the one for you that will change these chemicals (fatty acids) by about ½ (50%). We will check how well this process worked by collecting small pieces of colon tissue (biopsies) of the colon before any fish oil and after all the fish oil is consumed. We will also use blood samples to test for these fatty acids and a few others. We are going to collect diet information at several times throughout the study so we can see if the food you eat makes a difference too.
We hope to learn a lot about how fatty acids are metabolized (broken down or used) in the colon directly in combination with Omega-3 supplements.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 48
- Men and women who are between the ages of 25 and 75.
- The subject has been properly informed of the study and signed the informed Consent document(s).
- BMI is between 18 to 40.0 kg/m2
- Pre-menopausal women with intact female reproductive organs must have a negative pregnancy test within 2 weeks of the baseline flexible sigmoidoscopy. Post-menopausal is defined as no menses for the previous 12 months. If cessation of menses is within 12 months then the subject should be treated as pre-menopausal and a pregnancy test performed.
- Have a normal WBC, hemoglobin and platelet count, and renal and hepatic function obtained within the last 28 days
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• Pregnant or lactating women or women contemplating pregnancy for the duration of the protocol.
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Taking any of the following chronic medications:
- Insulin or oral hypoglycemics
- Anti-coagulants (or off 3 months prior to study start)
- Lovaza™ (prescription fish oil)
- Chronic NSAID use (including daily 325 mg or more of aspirin) or willing to go off NSAIDS for 3 weeks prior to enrollment to end of study (tDay 84)
- Steroids (except inhaled steroids for asthma)
- Other medications that may affect the biomarkers of interest
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Any supplement use (i.e. High dose vitamins, fish oils, other oils) that can affect the biomarkers of interest. Potential subjects will be given the option of participating if they agree to a 3-week wash-out period before starting on study and to avoid such supplements while on study.
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Has a history of any prior cancer diagnosed within the last 5 years except for basal cell or squamous cell tumors of the skin that have been surgically excised.
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Unable to read, write, or understand English.
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Unable to give informed consent.
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Subjects with a history of symptomatic chronic cardiovascular (NYHA Stage III or greater), renal, or liver disease as defined by variation from laboratory values in the inclusion criteria.
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Blood pressure ≥ 150/95 (manual reading).
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Unwilling to avoid intake of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents or corticosteroids over a 3 week period prior to study or during the entire study period.
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Showing evidence of lack of reliability or nonadherence (for example, missing a screening or enrollment appointment more than twice)
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Has a history of or known case of colonic disease such as colon cancer, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, Familial Adenoma Polyposis (FAP), or Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal adenocarcinoma (HNPCC).
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Known HIV or Hepatitis C
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Allergies to fish or fish oil
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Fish Oil Fish OIl -
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in PGE2 levels in colon mucosa 5 months Quantitate the amount of PGE2 in colon mucosa before and after 5 months of Fish Oil
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University of Michigan
🇺🇸Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States