Crohn Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Prucalopride on Small Bowel Transit Time in Patients Undergoing Capsule Endoscopy: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Small bowel capsule endoscopy is a test used to investigate for any abnormalities in the
small bowel. The small bowel is about 4 meters long. The battery time of the capsule is
about 8 hours. During this time the capsule takes pictures as it passes through the small
bowel. In about 15-20% of capsule tests the battery expires before the capsule passes
through the entire small bowel into the colon. Incomplete tests indicate that a variable
portion of small bowel was not visualized. Incomplete tests are associated with potential
missing of abnormalities in the portion of small bowel that was not reached. The capsule
test may often required to be repeated but the problem of incomplete examination may
persist. At present no medication has been approved to increase the rate of complete capsule
tests.
Prucalopride is a medication that has been approved in Canada and Europe for the treatment
of chronic idiopathic constipation. Animal and human studies suggested that prucalopride may
enhance the movement of the stomach and the small bowel. A recent presentation at a medical
meeting suggested that prucalopride may accelerate the passage of the capsule camera through
the small bowel without increasing the chance to miss a lesion in the small bowel.
The purpose of this study is to asses if the administration of a single dose of prucalopride
is going to decrease the time required by the capsule to move through the small bowel.
Capsule Endoscopy is now the first test to investigate for small bowel disease. Clinical
conditions in which capsule endoscopy can be useful include gastrointestinal bleeding of
unclear source, Crohn's disease, celiac disease and suspected small bowel tumors. Optimal
diagnostic yield of the capsule endoscopy depends not only on adequate small bowel
visualization, but also on the completion of small bowel examination. In approximately
15-20% of capsule studies, the capsule fails to pass through the small bowel into the colon
because of the limited battery time which is about 8 hours. This means that a lesion or an
abnormality can be missed in the portion of the small bowel that was not reached by the
capsule. As a result, the capsule endoscopy test may often need to be repeated.
Multiple factors have been associated with the prolongation of the time required for the
capsule to pass through the small bowel including hospitalization, prior small bowel
surgery, diabetes and advanced age in addition to the prolongation of the time required for
the capsule to pass through the stomach. Interventions to shorten small bowel transit time
are required to increase capsule small bowel completion rates. At present there is no drug
approved to shorten the small bowel transit time.
Prucalopride is a drug that has been approved for use in patients with chronic constipation.
Prucalopride works on special receptors in the gut and stimulate the gut movement. There are
basic and clinical studies suggesting that prucalopride may accelerate the movement of the
stomach and the small bowel. Therefore, prucalopride may accelerate the passage of the
capsule through the small bowel and increase the capsule completion rates. The investigators
of this trial recently presented their experience of prucalopride use prior to capsule
endoscopy at a medical meeting. Compared to a retrospective control group who did not
receive prucalopride, prucalopride accelerated the passage of the capsule through the small
bowel. There was no decrease in the diagnostic yield in the group who received prucalopride.
In this clinical trial, the investigators aim to investigate the effect of prucalopride on
the small bowel transit time, by performing a randomized placebo controlled trial. Patients
undergoing small bowel capsule endoscopy tests will be randomized to a single dose of
prucalopride ingested at the time of capsule endoscopy ingestion, or a placebo pill. The
primary objective of this study is to examine if the administration of a single dose of
prucalopride shortens small bowel transit time compared to placebo. The secondary objectives
include examining the effect of prucalopride on gastric transit time, small bowel capsule
endoscopy completion rate and the capsule diagnostic yield. The placebo group is used in
this clinical trial because there is no drug proven to be effective to shorten the small
bowel transit time.
Based on the experience of the investigators, the average small bowel transit time for
patients who were given prucalopride was 143 minutes. In the retrospective control group,
the small bowel transit time was 229 minutes with a standard deviation of 90 minutes. Based
on a presumed 20% minimal clinically important difference in small bowel transit time, the
investigators determined a total of 122 participants will be required, equally divided
between the two study arms.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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