The Gut Microbiome and Serum Metabolites As a Biological Mechanism Underlying Pain in Kidney Transplantation

Description

Study Summary Nearly half (47%) of people with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) whose kidney function is restored after kidney transplantation experience chronic pain compared to 19% of adults in the US general population. Pain is associated with comorbid fatigue, depression and anxiety, and withdrawal from usual physical and social activities; resulting in an inability to participate in and enjoy life. Severe pain can result in nonadherence to immunosuppression and treatment protocols and result in an increased risk of rejection, graft loss, and mortality. The role of symbiotic microbes (microbiota) in the gastrointestinal tract, and their functional genes (microbiome), is well established in diseases involving pain. Diet and stress play a major role in synthesis of signaling molecules critical to immunologic, metabolic, and endocrine pathways regulating chronic pain. Dietary patterns change dramatically after transplantation, as recipients move from a restricted "renal" diet to a regular diet, often resulting in increased consumption of foods high in sugars and fat. Moreover, psychological stress significantly impairs the function of the microbiome, initiating biological pathways involved in pain, leading to a disproportionate pain burden. Because the microbiome, serum metabolites, and pain are dynamic, our novel investigation will employ a prospective repeated measures design to interrogate the dynamic temporal relationships between the microbiome, metabolites associated with pathways regulating pain, transplantation factors (e.g. immunosuppression, kidney function), changing dietary patterns, and perceived stress, on pain scores before and after kidney transplantation. The investigators posit the gut microbiome, and its byproducts, may partially explain the underlying biological mechanisms of pain Interference in kidney disease. The investigators will address three aims: 1) To determine differential dynamic temporal relationships between microbial composition/functional genes and circulating serum metabolites in KTRs with pain vs no pain, 2) To determine the moderation effects of diet and perceived stress on dynamic temporal relationships between microbiome features, serum metabolites, and pain scores among KTRs, and 3) To use machine learning algorithms to identify host-microbial interactions that are causally linked to pain interference among KTRs. Because kidney function is restored, the kidney transplant model is powerful to study the longitudinal relationships between the microbiome, circulating metabolites and chronic pain in people with ESKD to develop patient-centered interventions to treat pain across the spectrum of CKD.

Conditions

Kidney Transplant Symptoms, Gut Microbiome

Study Overview

Study Details

Study overview

Study Summary Nearly half (47%) of people with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) whose kidney function is restored after kidney transplantation experience chronic pain compared to 19% of adults in the US general population. Pain is associated with comorbid fatigue, depression and anxiety, and withdrawal from usual physical and social activities; resulting in an inability to participate in and enjoy life. Severe pain can result in nonadherence to immunosuppression and treatment protocols and result in an increased risk of rejection, graft loss, and mortality. The role of symbiotic microbes (microbiota) in the gastrointestinal tract, and their functional genes (microbiome), is well established in diseases involving pain. Diet and stress play a major role in synthesis of signaling molecules critical to immunologic, metabolic, and endocrine pathways regulating chronic pain. Dietary patterns change dramatically after transplantation, as recipients move from a restricted "renal" diet to a regular diet, often resulting in increased consumption of foods high in sugars and fat. Moreover, psychological stress significantly impairs the function of the microbiome, initiating biological pathways involved in pain, leading to a disproportionate pain burden. Because the microbiome, serum metabolites, and pain are dynamic, our novel investigation will employ a prospective repeated measures design to interrogate the dynamic temporal relationships between the microbiome, metabolites associated with pathways regulating pain, transplantation factors (e.g. immunosuppression, kidney function), changing dietary patterns, and perceived stress, on pain scores before and after kidney transplantation. The investigators posit the gut microbiome, and its byproducts, may partially explain the underlying biological mechanisms of pain Interference in kidney disease. The investigators will address three aims: 1) To determine differential dynamic temporal relationships between microbial composition/functional genes and circulating serum metabolites in KTRs with pain vs no pain, 2) To determine the moderation effects of diet and perceived stress on dynamic temporal relationships between microbiome features, serum metabolites, and pain scores among KTRs, and 3) To use machine learning algorithms to identify host-microbial interactions that are causally linked to pain interference among KTRs. Because kidney function is restored, the kidney transplant model is powerful to study the longitudinal relationships between the microbiome, circulating metabolites and chronic pain in people with ESKD to develop patient-centered interventions to treat pain across the spectrum of CKD.

The Gut Microbiome and Serum Metabolites As a Biological Mechanism Underlying Pain in Kidney Transplantation (Biome-KT)

The Gut Microbiome and Serum Metabolites As a Biological Mechanism Underlying Pain in Kidney Transplantation

Condition
Kidney Transplant Symptoms
Intervention / Treatment

-

Contacts and Locations

Chicago

UI Health, Chicago, Illinois, United States, 60612

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

For general information about clinical research, read Learn About Studies.

Eligibility Criteria

  • * Receiving a kidney transplant at the University of Illinois Hospital \& Health Sciences System (UI Health) Transplant Center at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC),
  • * 18 years of age or older (adult), and
  • * Understand the study process and provide written informed consent to participate.
  • * Having taken systemic antimicrobials (except prophylactic penicillin) in the preceding 4 weeks.
  • * Having received a previous solid organ transplant.
  • * History of colon cancer or of an inflammatory bowel disease.
  • * Planning to receive a multiorgan transplant (e.g., simultaneous pancreas and kidney transplant).
  • * Having a history of Clostridium difficile infection in the preceding 8 weeks.

Ages Eligible for Study

18 Years to

Sexes Eligible for Study

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Collaborators and Investigators

University of Illinois at Chicago,

Study Record Dates

2028-03