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Clinical Trials/NCT04760847
NCT04760847
Not yet recruiting
Not Applicable

Intermittent Fasting as a Primary Means for Improving Quality of Life for Acute and Chronic Pancreatitis

H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute1 site in 1 country64 target enrollmentMarch 2026

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Pancreatitis
Sponsor
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute
Enrollment
64
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Pancreas related Quality of Life Index (PANQALI)
Status
Not yet recruiting
Last Updated
last year

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of this research is to compare intermittent fasting with a standard diet approach for improving the quality of life related to your pancreas disease. Our hope is to improve your symptoms and prevent you from needing to go into the hospital for pancreas-related issues.

Detailed Description

Fasting is a classic means for religious discipline, yet recently regaining favor in the medical landscape. Numerous studies have come forth, both in animals and humans outlining the benefit of intermittent fasting (IF) on various disease states and longevity. Though a relatively complex cellular process, fasting for at least 8-12 hours has been shown to lead to fatty acid release from a patient's adipose storage. These fatty acids then shuttle to the liver, where they are converted to ketones such as beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate. Ketones are then utilized for energy sources in the heart, brain and skeletal muscle tissue. The energy produced (ATP), then leads to increase in the cellular powerhouses, the mitochondria and autophagy or cell recycling. This cellular recycling is one main way in which IF has proven benefit for inflammatory conditions and in cancer care. Furthermore, reductions in amino acids and glucose due to fasting and reliance on ketones as energy, lead to down regulation of the membrane target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. Much is known regarding the mTOR pathway. Down regulation of mTOR is associated with increased autophagy (as above), lower protein and lipid synthesis, ribosome and lysosome creation (cell shuttles) and lowered energy use. Specific to the pancreas, mTOR down regulation has been shown to lower protein synthesis with the pancreas, caused by cholecystokinin (CCK), a pancreas stimulating hormone.2 The effect of this leads to lower pancreatic enzymes secretion. Inhibition of mTOR also lowers the generation of fibroblasts, the scar-tissue cells within the pancreas, leading to less scar-formation.3 Scar tissue formation is a vital part of morbidity and complications for patients with chronic pancreatitis. Pancreatic disease-modulation has also been evaluated in regard to the mTOR pathway.4 For pancreatic cancer, rapamycin a mTOR inhibitor have been implicated as targets for chemotherapy. Clinical trials have shown benefit for pancreatic cancer cases given rapamycin in concert with other chemotherapeutic medications.5 For acute, chronic pancreatitis and post-ndoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatopgraphy (ERCP) pancreatitis, mTOR is usually activated.6 In particular, blocking the mTOR pathway can favor autophagy, limit cell death (apoptosis) and hence necrosis of the pancreas. Necrosis in pancreatitis, leads to complex disease, possess a higher mortality, organ failure, and can make the clinical course more complicated. Therefore, the mTOR pathway has been implicated as a potential therapeutic target to ameliorate disease course and severity.4,7,8 The purpose of this study is to evaluate IF as a means for limiting disease severity with people who have recurrent acute pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis. Our hypothesis is that IF will improve pancreatic-disease related quality of life.1

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 2026
End Date
April 1, 2026
Last Updated
last year
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Age ≥ 18 year
  • Recurrent acute pancreatitis defined by greater than 2 episodes of pancreatitis, defined by:
  • abdominal pain and either amylase or lipase \> 3 x the upper limit of normal, imaging suggestive of, separated by time
  • Anatomy of chronic pancreatitis defined by Rosemont criterion9 or on imaging (CT, MRI)
  • Pancreatic exocrine insufficiency defined by a pancreatic elastase \< 200 ug/g stool10

Exclusion Criteria

  • Age \< 18 years
  • Pregnant Patients
  • Age \> 80 years
  • Patients who cannot consent for themselves
  • Glycogen storage disease
  • Insulinoma or hypoglycemic state
  • Active alcohol abuse
  • Alcohol induced acute pancreatitis
  • Gallstone induced acute pancreatitis
  • Pancreatic solid neoplasm

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Pancreas related Quality of Life Index (PANQALI)

Time Frame: 24 weeks

Pancreas related Quality of Life Index (PANQALI) is pancreas related quality of life index scale from 0 (lowest or better disease activity) to 90 (highest or worse disease activity)

Secondary Outcomes

  • Patient Body mass index(24 weeks)
  • Vitamin D 25-OH levels(24 weeks)
  • stool pancreatic elastase levels(24 weeks)
  • Pain scores(24 weeks)
  • Patient weight(24 weeks)
  • Oral Morphine Equivalent Daily Dosing(24 weeks)
  • Readmissions(24 weeks)
  • Length of Stay(24 weeks)

Study Sites (1)

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