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NCT05133986 | Active, not recruiting | Metabolomics


Using Untargeted Metabolomics to Identify Urinary Biomarkers of Onion Intake
Sponsor:

Manchester Metropolitan University

Information provided by (Responsible Party):

Elliot Owen

Brief Summary:

Fruit and vegetable (FV) intake has been reported as a modifiable risk factor of globally pervasive chronic diseases. Traditionally, the measurement of dietary intake has been conducted via self-report methods such as food diaries, food frequency questionnaires, and dietary recall. These methods are inherently subject to sources of error and biases. The objective measurement of diet-specific urinary biomarkers has been proposed as an alternate assessment method. A dose-dependent biomarker or biomarker panel for total FV intake has been investigated but not successfully established. In a recent publication as part of this PhD research, the researchers outlined a concise panel of 7 FVs that are predictive of total FV intake in a UK population. Recent studies have implemented an untargeted metabolomic approach to identify novel biomarkers of some of the 7 FVs identified in our prior research, but not with onion intake. The aim of this study is to detect, quantify and identify dose-dependent biomarker(s) of onion intake in a UK population using untargeted metabolomics. Phase 1 will be an acute randomised crossover intervention study, involving the consumption of a standardised portion of cooked onions (test) or couscous (control). Urine samples over the 24-hour period post-consumption will be collected. Phase 2 will be a dose-dependent crossover intervention study, where participants are supplied with supplementary onion portions (low, medium, high) to be consumed with their habitual evening meals. Within each supplementation period, participants will consume the same quantity of onions across the 4 days and collect a midstream first void urine samples on the fifth day. Trial order will be randomised, and a washout period of 3 days will be implemented between supplementation periods. 14 participants will be recruited for both phases of data collection. Urine samples will be analysed by high-performance liquid-chromatography with quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-QTOF-MS) to identify potential biomarkers.

Condition or disease

Metabolomics

Intervention/treatment

Onion Feeding

Couscous Feeding

Onion Supplementation Period

Phase

Not Applicable

Study Type : Interventional
Estimated Enrollment : 16 participants
Masking : None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose : Other
Official Title : Using Untargeted Metabolomics to Identify Urinary Biomarkers of Onion Intake
Actual Study Start Date : April 6, 2022
Estimated Primary Completion Date : December 1, 2023
Estimated Study Completion Date : December 31, 2023
Arm Intervention/treatment

Experimental: Onion feeding first, couscous feeding second

Participants will report to the laboratory at 8am in a fasted state (water consumption is permitted) and provide a spot baseline urine sample. Participants will then be served a 120g portion of onions (experimental condition), prepared under standardized conditions. Participants shall remain supervised in the laboratory and will only consume water (100mL per hour) for the subsequent 6 hours, after which participants are free to consume their habitual diet (except alcohol, tea coffee, and FVs). In the 24-hour postprandial test period, participants will obtain urine samples at several time-points. Urine collection vessels will be used to obtain samples at 0-1, 1-2, 2-4, 4-6, 6-12, 12-24 hours. This experimental protocol shall be repeated following a 4-day washout period (habitual diet consumption with no restrictions imposed on participants) with 120g of couscous consumed instead of onions, as a control condition.

Other: Onion Feeding

Experimental: Couscous feeding first, onion feeding second

Participants will report to the laboratory at 8am in a fasted state (water consumption is permitted) and provide a spot baseline urine sample. Participants will then be served a 120g portion of couscous (control condition), prepared under standardized conditions. Participants shall remain supervised in the laboratory and will only consume water (100mL per hour) for the subsequent 6 hours, after which participants are free to consume their habitual diet (except alcohol, tea coffee, and FVs). In the 24-hour postprandial test period, participants will obtain urine samples at several time-points. Urine collection vessels will be used to obtain samples at 0-1, 1-2, 2-4, 4-6, 6-12, 12-24 hours. This experimental protocol shall be repeated following a 4-day washout period (habitual diet consumption with no restrictions imposed on participants) with 120g of onions consumed instead of couscous, as an experimental condition.

Other: Couscous Feeding

Other: Onion supplementation period

This dose-dependent biomarker validation intervention will include three 4-day supplementation periods separated by two 3-day washout periods. Supplementation periods will provide participants with a daily portion of onions to be consumed with their evening meals. The daily quantity of onion supplementation, low (40g), medium, (80g) and high (160g), will remain constant throughout each 4-day period, and the order will be individually randomised. Participants will be asked to avoid onion intake throughout the supplementation periods, other than the portions provided by researchers. First morning void urine samples will be collected by participants on the morning after the supplementation period and obtained by researchers.

Other: Onion Feeding

Ages Eligible for Study: 18 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study: All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers: Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
  • Healthy
  • Non-pregnant/lactating
  • BMI between 18.5 and 30 kg/m^2
  • Non-smokers.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Any diagnosed health condition (chronic or infectious diseases)
  • Consumption of medications/nutritional supplements
  • Any allergies/intolerances to onions/couscous.

Using Untargeted Metabolomics to Identify Urinary Biomarkers of Onion Intake

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Using Untargeted Metabolomics to Identify Urinary Biomarkers of Onion Intake

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Locations


Not yet recruiting

United Kingdom,

Manchester Metropolitan University

Manchester, United Kingdom,

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