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Mediterranean Diet Versus Western Diet on Fatigue in Autoimmune Hepatitis Patients

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Autoimmune Hepatitis
Registration Number
NCT06250309
Lead Sponsor
Indiana University
Brief Summary

This is a single-center, proof-of-concept pilot study which uses a cross-over design to compare two dietary interventions/treatments: Western Diet (WD) vs Mediterranean (MD) and impact on quality-of-life parameters in AIH. Participants will receive both treatments through two phases and will be divided into two groups.

Detailed Description

Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) patients have dramatically reduced quality of life compared to healthy controls. Many symptoms that drive this reduction remain well known, yet clinicians have little to no data on interventions that may reduce symptom burden.

As awareness of the broad life impact of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) has increased, a more comprehensive clinical model that considers other medical interventions such as diet has become more important to patients. Diet has been an area of important study in a number of other auto-inflammatory diseases, particularly focused on pathogenesis, symptomatic treatment, and even modification of clinical outcomes in a number of autoimmune illnesses.

As complex diseases, autoimmune illnesses such as rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and even lupus are the result of both genetic and environmental risk factors. Environmental contributions from diet are ubiquitous, and the increased prevalence of autoimmune illnesses in North America has been hypothesized in part related to western diet (WD). Characterized by a high intake of red meat, saturated and trans fats, a low ratio of omega-3:omega-6 fatty acids and high consumption of refined carbohydrates, WD has been associated with an increased risk of autoimmunity principally through an increase of inflammation and an induction of insulin-resistance and obesity.

To date, the Mediterranean diet (MD) has the most evidence as a disease modifying intervention in autoimmune illnesses. MD's protective properties are related to antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effect may related to abundance of several nutrients, especially dietary fiber, magnesium, omega 3 and mono-unsaturated fatty acids, polyphenols, and tocopherols, that promote a reduction in inflammation as well as insulin-resistance and thereby protect from diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Unfortunately, in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), the anti-inflammatory properties of MD impact on disease development and progression have been mixed. Yet, MD consumption has been shown to provide a symptomatic improvement, including disease activity, inflammatory markers and physical function

Fatigue is the most prevalent symptom among AIH patients and has the most dramatic impact on quality of life. Current guidelines have no specific guidance to treatment or management of fatigue beyond seeking other medical contributions (i.e. anemia, cardiac disease, hypothyroidism). Dietary changes have not been investigated as a therapeutic approach in AIH despite data from other autoimmune diseases

A total of 48 subjects will be randomized by a computer program into one of two groups: MD or WD. This is a cross-over study and after completion of the initial randomized arm (MD or WD), the study patient will enter the opposite dietary intervention as the first arm. The study team (PI and study coordinator) will remain blind to the diet intervention study. Randomization arm information will be provided to the nutritional team preparing diets for treatment arms. The patients will also remain blinded to the diet type in each arm, despite patient understanding of dietary components may reveal the investigational diet arm they are currently receiving.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
48
Inclusion Criteria
  • Established autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) confirmed according to simplified criteria (>6) or historical confirmatory liver biopsy with inflammation consistent with AIH
  • Therapeutically stable AIH: no changes to immunosuppression (corticosteroids or baseline immunosuppression) within 4 weeks of study enrollment
  • Previous enrollment in the Indiana University GRACE study
  • Fatigue domain score (PROMIS-29) more than population mean (PROMIS 29 score): T-score ≥ 55
  • Diagnosis of AIH > 6 months
  • Current age: 18 to 80 years old
  • Willing and agree to comply with protocol requirements
  • Female patients who are of reproductive potential must agree for the duration of the study to use an effective means of contraception (e.g., abstinence, hormonal contraception methods that inhibit ovulation, intrauterine device, intrauterine hormone-releasing system, bilateral tubal ligation, vasectomized partner)
  • Capable of storing 1 week duration of frozen food and preparing meals
  • Capable of receiving weekly frozen food on scheduled day of delivery
  • Capable of understanding and signing the informed consent document
Exclusion Criteria
  • Concurrent diagnosis of celiac disease
  • Concurrent use of dedicated dietary intervention (patient driven or else)
  • Established diagnosis of variant syndrome (AIH with Primary biliary cholangitis, AIH with Primary sclerosing cholangitis)
  • Child Pugh score > 7
  • MELDNa score > 7
  • Clinical evidence of de-compensated cirrhosis: ascites, total bilirubin >1.5, large esophageal varices or history of bleeding, known diagnosis of hepatic encephalopathy
  • Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding or intend to become so for the entire duration of the study; this information will be self-reported; no pregnancy test will be performed
  • History of liver transplantation
  • Current treatment with an investigational drug
  • Historical intolerance or allergy to foods included in a Mediterranean Diet or a Western Diet

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in clinical fatigue via Promis 2924 weeks

Assessment from the patient only through data collection from the Promis-29 instrument. This 29 item instrument that measures various difficulties in health related quality of life in 7 domains. For this measure, a higher scores equals more of the concept being measured.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in alanine transaminase (ALT) value24 weeks

Assessment from the patient only through lab results taken from a venous blood draw.

Change in overall health related quality of life via Promis 2924 weeks

Assessment from the patient only through data collection from the Promis-29 instrument. This 29 item instrument that measures various difficulties in health related quality of life in 7 domains. For this measure, a higher scores equals more of the concept being measured.

Changes in liver stiffness and fat content via transient elastography24 weeks

Assessment from the patient only as measured by VCTE (vibration controlled transient elastography) via FibroScan® and with bioelectrical impedance via INBody®measure. A higher score equals more liver steatosis and fibrosis.

Change in IgG value24 weeks

Assessment from the patient only through lab results taken from a venous blood draw.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

IU Health University Hosptial

🇺🇸

Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

IU Health University Hosptial
🇺🇸Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Kelsey Green, MPH
Contact
317-278-9292
greenke@iu.edu
Regina Weber, BS
Contact
317-278-3584
reginaw@iu.edu
Craig Lammert, MD
Contact

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