Effect of Fasting on the Asthma Inflammasome
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Asthma |
Therapuetic Areas: | Pulmonary / Respiratory Diseases |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 60 |
Updated: | 3/9/2019 |
Start Date: | June 12, 2015 |
End Date: | January 7, 2019 |
Pilot Study to Evaluate the Effect of Fasting on the Asthma Inflammasome
Background:
Research shows that restricting calories has a positive effect on immune cell health in
healthy people. Researchers want to learn if it will help people with asthma. They want to
better understand how the body s immune response and lung function responds to short-term
calorie restriction. For this, they want people to fast (no food or drink except water) for
24 hours.
Objective:
To explore the benefits of calorie restriction in people with asthma.
Eligibility:
Healthy people ages 18 to 60 who have a history consistent with asthma and prior
documentation of airflow obstruction or wheezing.
Design:
- Participants who have taken part in asthma research at NIH will be screened with a
telephone interview. All other participants will have a medical history, blood tests,
and physical exam.
- Eligible participants will return to the NIH Clinical Center one morning for 2 hours.
They will be fed breakfast. They may have blood and urine tests.
- Participants will then fast for 24 hours.
- Participants will return to the Clinical Center the next morning for 4 hours. They will
have blood drawn. They will eat breakfast and then repeat blood draws 2.5 hours later.
They will have a urine test.
- Blood and urine tests will be done at the end of the fast and after the meals to confirm
that the participant fasted for the full 24-hour period.
- Participants will have lung function tests and exhaled gas measurements. A machine will
measure the volume of air they can breathe out. Some gases in the breath increase with
inflammation. Participants will breathe into a machine that analyzes the gases in their
breath.
Research shows that restricting calories has a positive effect on immune cell health in
healthy people. Researchers want to learn if it will help people with asthma. They want to
better understand how the body s immune response and lung function responds to short-term
calorie restriction. For this, they want people to fast (no food or drink except water) for
24 hours.
Objective:
To explore the benefits of calorie restriction in people with asthma.
Eligibility:
Healthy people ages 18 to 60 who have a history consistent with asthma and prior
documentation of airflow obstruction or wheezing.
Design:
- Participants who have taken part in asthma research at NIH will be screened with a
telephone interview. All other participants will have a medical history, blood tests,
and physical exam.
- Eligible participants will return to the NIH Clinical Center one morning for 2 hours.
They will be fed breakfast. They may have blood and urine tests.
- Participants will then fast for 24 hours.
- Participants will return to the Clinical Center the next morning for 4 hours. They will
have blood drawn. They will eat breakfast and then repeat blood draws 2.5 hours later.
They will have a urine test.
- Blood and urine tests will be done at the end of the fast and after the meals to confirm
that the participant fasted for the full 24-hour period.
- Participants will have lung function tests and exhaled gas measurements. A machine will
measure the volume of air they can breathe out. Some gases in the breath increase with
inflammation. Participants will breathe into a machine that analyzes the gases in their
breath.
The NLRP3 inflammasome is part of the innate immune system that can be activated by
atherosclerosis, gout and diabetes (sterile inflammation). As mitochondrial signaling can
trigger the NLRP3 inflammasome, we initially proposed that fasting, via a nutrient-sensing
mitochondrial program, would dampen this innate immune program. Our preliminary data shows
that a 24-hour fasting does blunt NLRP3 inflammasome activation in healthy young individuals.
Interestingly, this inflammasome program has been implicated in the pathophysiology of
bronchoreactivity linked to asthma and intermittent fasting has been found to reduce disease
exacerbations in asthmatic patients. The objective of this protocol will extend our
investigations, from what we are finding in young control normal volunteers, to enable us to
investigate stable mild-moderate asthmatic subjects to determine whether fasting can blunt
inflammasome activation and assess whether this transient nutrient-deprivation maneuver can
improve airflow. Blood samples and pulmonary function testing to assay the immune response
and bronchoreactivity will be performed in subjects in response to a 24-hour fast (water
intake will not be restricted) followed by re-testing 3 hours after a fixed caloric meal. The
objective of this pilot study is to identify if these immune adaptive pathways can be subdued
in human subjects with a known inflammasome linked disease. Additionally, this study may
enable us to identify a potential therapeutic pathway to blunt/negate inflammation associated
with nutrient-excess associated bronchoreactivity of asthma.
atherosclerosis, gout and diabetes (sterile inflammation). As mitochondrial signaling can
trigger the NLRP3 inflammasome, we initially proposed that fasting, via a nutrient-sensing
mitochondrial program, would dampen this innate immune program. Our preliminary data shows
that a 24-hour fasting does blunt NLRP3 inflammasome activation in healthy young individuals.
Interestingly, this inflammasome program has been implicated in the pathophysiology of
bronchoreactivity linked to asthma and intermittent fasting has been found to reduce disease
exacerbations in asthmatic patients. The objective of this protocol will extend our
investigations, from what we are finding in young control normal volunteers, to enable us to
investigate stable mild-moderate asthmatic subjects to determine whether fasting can blunt
inflammasome activation and assess whether this transient nutrient-deprivation maneuver can
improve airflow. Blood samples and pulmonary function testing to assay the immune response
and bronchoreactivity will be performed in subjects in response to a 24-hour fast (water
intake will not be restricted) followed by re-testing 3 hours after a fixed caloric meal. The
objective of this pilot study is to identify if these immune adaptive pathways can be subdued
in human subjects with a known inflammasome linked disease. Additionally, this study may
enable us to identify a potential therapeutic pathway to blunt/negate inflammation associated
with nutrient-excess associated bronchoreactivity of asthma.
- INCLUSION CRITERIA:
- Males and females between the ages of 18 and 60
- Asthmatic subjects will have a history consistent with asthma, be on chronic asthma
therapy and have prior documentation of reversible airflow obstruction based upon
either a positive response to an inhaled bronchodilator or a positive methacholine
bronchoprovocation challenge test
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
- Subjects with concurrent acute illness or other chronic illnesses associated with
inflammation including diabetes requiring medical management.
- Female subjects who are pregnant or lactating
- Subjects who have donated blood or participated in another clinical trial involving
blood draws in the last 8 weeks.
- Medical condition identified by screening bloodwork that would preclude safe
participation or valid data collection.
We found this trial at
1
site
9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Phone: 800-411-1222
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