Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02570477 |
Other study ID # |
FMT-CDI-RCT |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 2015 |
Est. completion date |
December 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2023 |
Source |
Chinese University of Hong Kong |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a leading cause of hospital-associated
gastrointestinal illness, associated with significant morbidity and mortality and has a high
burden on health-care system. The incidence of CDI has increased to epidemic proportion
worldwide over the past decade. Community-acquired CDI, elderly and hospitalized patients
receiving antibiotics are the main group at risk for developing CDI.
Currently, the first-line treatment for C. difficile-associated diarrhea includes cessation
of the antibiotic implicated in the development of CDI, treatment with metronidazole or
vancomycin and recently Fidaxomicin which is yet to be available in Hong Kong. However,
disease recurrence is an increasing problem and 20% to 60% of patients experience at least
one recurrence within a few weeks of completion of antibiotic treatment. Moreover, an
increasing number of patients who require life-saving emergency colectomy experience
persistent CDI after surgery. Until recently, an effective treatment against recurrent CDI is
not available. Generally, repeated and extended courses of vancomycin are prescribed.
Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) defined as infusion of feces from healthy donors to
affected subjects has attracted great interest in recent years and is now recommended as the
most effective therapy for CDI not responding to standard therapies. Systematic reviews of
prospective trials, case series and one randomized controlled trial have shown an overall
cure rate of close to 100%. More than 50% of patients stated they would have FMT as their
preferred first treatment option if CDI were to recur.
This proposal aims to investigate the efficacy of FMT as first line therapy in patients with
severe CDI and to assess changes in the fecal microbiota after FMT using pyrosequencing
techniques.
Description:
Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a leading cause of hospital-associated
gastrointestinal illness, associated with significant morbidity and mortality and has a high
burden on health-care system. The incidence of CDI has increased to epidemic proportion
worldwide over the past decade. Community-acquired CDI, elderly and hospitalized patients
receiving antibiotics are the main group at risk for developing CDI 1.
Currently, the first-line treatment for C. difficile-associated diarrhea includes cessation
of the antibiotic implicated in the development of CDI, treatment with metronidazole or
vancomycin and recently Fidaxomicin which is yet to be available in Hong Kong2. However,
disease recurrence is an increasing problem and 20% to 60% of patients experience at least
one recurrence within a few weeks of completion of antibiotic treatment. Moreover, an
increasing number of patients who require life-saving emergency colectomy experience
persistent CDI after surgery. Until recently, an effective treatment against recurrent CDI is
not available. Generally, repeated and extended courses of vancomycin are prescribed3.
Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) defined as infusion of feces from healthy donors to
affected subjects has attracted great interest in recent years and is now recommended as the
most effective therapy for CDI not responding to standard therapies 4. Systematic reviews of
prospective trials, case series and one randomized controlled trial have shown an overall
cure rate of close to 100% 5, 6. More than 50% of patients stated they would have FMT as
their preferred first treatment option if CDI were to recur 7.
While FMT has been proven to be effective in refractory CDI, the role of FMT as first-line
therapy in a subset of patients with severe CDI, or high risk features for severe CDI has not
been studied. These are generally patients in whom the risk of colectomy and mortality is
exceedingly high. In addition, the mechanism of FMT in CDI is not completely clear, and
limited data are available on the effects of FMT on the microbiota post FMT. It has been
suggested that CDI results in deficiencies in fecal flora composition, particularly of
Bacteroides and Firmicutes, and these deficiencies in the microbiota facilitate colonization
with C. difficile. Microarray analysis in small number of subjects has shown a major shift in
the patients' microbiota after donor-feces infusion toward that of the donors8. The
experimental tools required for in depth analysis of the intestinal microbiota are now
becoming available. This study aims to investigate the efficacy of FMT as first line therapy
in patients with moderate to severe CDI and to assess changes in the fecal microbiota after
FMT using pyrosequencing techniques.