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OncoMatch/Clinical Trials/NCT07477522

Effects of High-Fiber Diet on Gut Microbiota, Metabolism, and Immune Microenvironment in Solid Tumor Patients: A Clinical Study

Is NCT07477522 recruiting? Yes, currently enrolling (Jun 2026). This Phase 1 trial studies non-drug interventions for colorectal cancer (diagnosis).

Phase 1RecruitingWest China HospitalNCT07477522Data as of Jun 2026Location: China

Cancer remains a major global public-health challenge and a central focus of medical research. According to the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC, 2020), 19.29 million new malignant tumors and 9.96 million cancer deaths occurred worldwide, \>90 % being solid cancers. Lung cancer alone accounted for 2.2 million new cases and 1.8 million deaths; \>75 % of patients were already at an advanced stage at diagnosis. Current options for late-stage solid tumors are limited: surgery is often impossible because of metastasis; cytotoxic chemotherapy produces dose-limiting toxicities (grade Ⅲ-Ⅳ myelosuppression 15-40 %, mucositis 50-80 %); radiotherapy risks pneumonitis (5-15 %) or enteritis (5-20 %) when tumors abut vital organs; targeted agents succumb to acquired resistance after a median 9-13 months; and immune-checkpoint inhibitors achieve \<40 % objective response with 7-15 % grade 3-4 immune-related adverse events. Dietary intervention is therefore emerging as a promising adjunct. Dietary fibre protects against cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, yet intake is universally low. WHO and the Chinese Nutrition Society recommend 25-30 g total fibre per day (≈15-21 g insoluble), whereas Chinese adults consume only \~11 g insoluble fibre. High-fibre diets reshape gut microbiota, augment short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, strengthen intestinal barrier function, activate CD8⁺ T cells and dampen regulatory T cells, thereby enhancing anti-tumour immunity. A melanoma cohort showed improved progression-free survival under immunotherapy when fibre intake was high. Similar microbiota-immune axes may operate in colorectal and other solid cancers, but clinical data are scarce. We therefore propose a study to examine whether a high-insoluble-fibre diet (\>21 g/day) modulates gut-microbiota composition, metabolite profiles and peripheral-blood immune subsets in solid-tumour patients, and to evaluate consequent effects on treatment response and quality of life. The findings will clarify whether fibre-driven microbiota-immune crosstalk can be harnessed as a personalised nutritional strategy to improve cancer outcomes.

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Extracted eligibility criteria

Cancer type

Colorectal Cancer

Performance status

ECOG 0–1(Restricted strenuous activity)

Demographics

Ages ≤ 75

Lab requirements

Blood counts

ANC ≥ 1.5×10⁹/L (no G-CSF in past 14 days); platelets ≥ 75×10⁹/L; hemoglobin ≥ 8 g/dL (no transfusion/erythropoietin in past 7 days); serum albumin ≥ 3.0 g/dL

Kidney function

Creatinine clearance rate ≥ 50 mL/min (Cockcroft-Gault) or serum creatinine ≤ 1.5× ULN

Liver function

Total bilirubin ≤ 1.5× ULN; AST and ALT ≤ 2.5× ULN; if liver metastasis, ALT and/or AST ≤ 5× ULN, and total bilirubin ≤ 3× ULN; if liver or bone metastasis, AKP ≤ 5× ULN

Cardiac function

NYHA heart failure grade II or above, LVEF < 50% excluded; severe arrhythmias that cannot be controlled by drug treatment excluded

Sufficient organ function, and the subjects need to meet the following laboratory indicators: ... see full text

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Frequently asked questions

Is NCT07477522 currently recruiting?

Yes, this trial is currently recruiting patients.

Is there an age limit?

Yes. Patients must be 75 years or younger.

Could you qualify for this trial?

Enter your biomarker results to see how this trial's eligibility criteria match your specific cancer profile.

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