Summary
IMMEDIATE aims to investigate and explore the diet-microbiome-immunometabolism-axis as a sensor for health-to-disease transition and evaluate strategies to maintain an individual’s well-being. Chronic inflammation is the major root of most diseases. Understanding of this process preceding organ dysfunction or damage and identification of biomarkers in the pre-symptomatic stage and risk but also resilience factors of health-to-disease transition will enable targeted and personalized interventions to prevent irreversible organ damage. Metabolites of gut microbiota are key messengers between diet, microbiota and host, maintaining the balance of pro- and anti-inflammation. Our study takes advantage of cutting-edge omics technologies available within the IMMEDIATE consortium in conjunction with available clinical data and biospecimens from ongoing observational studies, enrolling “healthy” subjects and individuals in the pre-disease stage but with largely distinct environmental and dietary modulators, including a cohort of kidney transplant recipients in whom renal function has been “reset to baseline”. The identification of clinical and omics-derived biomarkers will – by employing AI algorithms - yield a personalized risk / resilience score of chronic inflammation and thus a better prediction of an individual’s risk of transition towards disease. A proof-of-concept intervention study with the anti-inflammatory microbe Akkermansia muciniphila will be conducted to test whether deflections of the microbiome-metabolite-immune axis can be reverted on the biomarker level but also with respect to clinical outcomes and overall well-being. Mobile apps developed by the IMMEDIATE consortium in collaboration with patient organizations tracking numerous lifestyle-related measures and providing guidance and feedback on these aspects will empower individuals to adopt and integrate these knowledge-based health interventions into their own lives, hereby self-managing their own health.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101095540 |
Start date: | 01-01-2023 |
End date: | 31-12-2026 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 6 221 606,25 Euro - 6 221 606,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
IMMEDIATE aims to investigate and explore the diet-microbiome-immunometabolism-axis as a sensor for health-to-disease transition and evaluate strategies to maintain an individual’s well-being. Chronic inflammation is the major root of most diseases. Understanding of this process preceding organ dysfunction or damage and identification of biomarkers in the pre-symptomatic stage and risk but also resilience factors of health-to-disease transition will enable targeted and personalized interventions to prevent irreversible organ damage. Metabolites of gut microbiota are key messengers between diet, microbiota and host, maintaining the balance of pro- and anti-inflammation. Our study takes advantage of cutting-edge omics technologies available within the IMMEDIATE consortium in conjunction with available clinical data and biospecimens from ongoing observational studies, enrolling “healthy” subjects and individuals in the pre-disease stage but with largely distinct environmental and dietary modulators, including a cohort of kidney transplant recipients in whom renal function has been “reset to baseline”. The identification of clinical and omics-derived biomarkers will – by employing AI algorithms - yield a personalized risk / resilience score of chronic inflammation and thus a better prediction of an individual’s risk of transition towards disease. A proof-of-concept intervention study with the anti-inflammatory microbe Akkermansia muciniphila will be conducted to test whether deflections of the microbiome-metabolite-immune axis can be reverted on the biomarker level but also with respect to clinical outcomes and overall well-being. Mobile apps developed by the IMMEDIATE consortium in collaboration with patient organizations tracking numerous lifestyle-related measures and providing guidance and feedback on these aspects will empower individuals to adopt and integrate these knowledge-based health interventions into their own lives, hereby self-managing their own health.Status
SIGNEDCall topic
HORIZON-HLTH-2022-STAYHLTH-02-01Update Date
09-02-2023
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