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ID
Source
Brief title
Health condition
NASH
Sponsors and support
Intervention
Outcome measures
Primary outcome
To investigate whether microbial produced ethanol plays a role in the development of NASH.
Secondary outcome
NA
Background summary
Changes in the composition of the gut microbiota have been associated with alterations in host metabolism and recent evidence suggest that gut microbiota might also be involved in the development of Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) and subsequent Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). So far, however, causality has not been demonstrated. Among many gut microbial metabolites, endogenous intestinally produced ethanol has gained interest in the past decade for its involvement in the development of NAFLD. Ethanol is produced by intestinal bacteria has been suggested that ethanol might play a role in the development of NAFLD, especially in the transition from NAFLD to NASH. When produced in significant amounts, hepatic ethanol metabolism inhibits beta-oxidation of fatty acids which will induce storage of lipids in the liver. Endogenously produced ethanol reaches the liver via the portal vein and is then rapidly removed from the circulation via extremely efficient hepatic mechanisms, leaving almost untraceable concentrations in the peripheral plasma if liver function is uncompromised. Several studies have however showed that subjects with NASH (known to have a compromised liver function) have increased peripheral concentrations of ethanol, however these concentrations are so low that one might argue whether this is clinical relevant regarding the development of NASH. The first step in ethanol catabolism is the oxidation of ethanol to acetaldehyde using NAD+, mainly via the hepatic enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase. Fomepizole (4-methylpyrazole) is a specific inhibitor of the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase. In a previous study, a significant elevation of peripheral plasma ethanol concentrations were observed in lean subjects who were treated with fomepizole after intake of lingonberry juice. Since subjects with NASH might have more ethanol producing bacteria, we anticipate to find increased concentrations of ethanol in subjects with NASH compared to healthy control subjects during a mixed meal test after the infusion of fomepizole. Moreover, when intestinal microbiota is temporarily eradicated by a short term oral antibiotic course, we expect to see no increase in peripheral plasma ethanol levels upon fomepizole infusion in patients with NASH.
Study objective
We hypothesize that subjects with NASH produce more ethanol after a mixed meal tolerance test than subjects with a healthy liver after receiving a infusion with fomepizole.
Study design
baseline, visit 1, visit 2
Intervention
Subjects will undergo an ultrasonography of the liver to assess hepatic steatosis and will undergo a clinical mixed meal tolerance test and get an infusion with fomepizole or saline (placebo). Only NASH patients will also receive oral antibiotics course of 7 days followed by mixed meal test with fomepizole infusion.
Inclusion criteria
- Diagnosis of NASH on liver biopsy taken on clinical grounds at the outpatient clinic, or healthy volunteer
- 18-65 years of age
- BMI > 25 kg/m2
- Subjects should be able to give informed consent
Exclusion criteria
- Primary lipid disorder
- Known genetic basis for insulin resistance or glucose intolerance
- Ethanol intake > 2 U/week
- Pregnancy, females who are breastfeeding
- Hepatitis B and/or C
- Liver cirrhosis
- Auto-immune hepatitis
- Wilson disease3/ alpha 1-antitripsine deficiency
- Hemochromatosis
- Use of drugs interacting with fomepizole (products requiring CYP2E1 for metabolizing).
Design
Recruitment
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Plan description
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In other registers
Register | ID |
---|---|
NTR-new | NL7693 |
Other | NA : METC Amsterdam UMC, lokatie AMC 2018_331 |