Diverticular Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Assessment of the Probiotic Symprove as a Dietary Supplement in Patients With Symptomatic Diverticular Disease
Diverticulitis is an extremely common digestive disease particularly found in the large
intestine in elderly patients and develops from diverticulosis. Diverticulosis is
characterized by the formation of pouches (diverticula) that bulge to the outside of the
colon, through areas of weakness in the colonic wall. Inflammation (diverticulitis) results
if one of these diverticula becomes infected and / or obstructed. It is commonly accompanied
by obvious or microscopic perforation, ranging in severity from a single, mild, acute attack
of diverticulitis to more severe attacks characterized by abscess formation, occasionally
resulting in chronic complications such as obstruction and fistula formation. After an
episode of diverticulitis many patients develop changes in bowel openings, from diarrhoea
and constipation, and many patients have abdominal pain and a symptom complex that resembles
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS).
According to available guidelines, treatment of symptomatic, but uncomplicated, diverticular
disease aims to reduce the frequency and severity of diverticular related symptoms
(abdominal pain, bloating, alterations in bowel habit) and to prevent complications.
Different agents have been proposed, such as bulking agents, antispasmodics, and nonabsorbed
topical antibiotics, 5amino acid preparations but these measures are unproven or
controversial. It is thought that intestinal bacteria may play a significant role in the
symptoms of post-diverticulitis.
The investigators have recently shown that a probiotic (Symprove) reduced the symptoms of
IBS significantly in comparison with a placebo in a double-blind randomized trial and
without side effects (paper in preparation). Because the symptoms in IBS and
post-diverticulitis are so similar the investigators propose a double-blind placebo
controlled trial of Symprove in patients with problematic diverticulitis. Patients will be
recruited from a dedicated diverticulitis clinic using standard exclusion criteria. This is
a 90 day symptom based trial using accepted outcome measures. If successful the results will
have widespread implications for treatment of diverticular disease.
The patients for this study will be recruited from the diverticular disease clinic at King's
College Hospital. The clinic is the first and the largest specialist diverticular clinic in
the UK and attracts referrals directly from GP's, internal referrals from gastroenterology,
in and outpatients and increasingly from Gastroenterology and Colorectal Surgery clinics in
the South East of England. Eligible patients who meet fulfill the entry criteria will be
invited to participate. They will receive a patient information sheet, which they take home
with them for reading. They will then be seen again (usually within 2 weeks, or after any
confirmatory tests have been completed) to discuss any questions that they may have and for
a decision for inclusion into the trial.
Each will undergo a full blood count and conventional biochemistry and they will provide a
stool sample for assessment of intestinal inflammation by a calprotectin estimation. They
will also complete a baseline symptoms-based questionnaire. They will then be randomized to
treatments A or B, both investigator and patient will be unaware of whether it is the active
treatment (Symprove) or placebo. Each patient will complete the symptom-based questionnaire
every 30 days while on on the 90 day treatment (Day 30, Day 60, and Day 90). The primary
outcome measure will be a change in symptoms score from Day 0 to Day 90.
Also every 30 days while on treatment, stool tests will be repeated for faecal calprotectin.
An additional sample will be frozen for eventual microbiota assessment. The secondary
outcome measure will be change in the faecal microbiota between Day 0 and Day 90.
Patients will be seen in clinic 30 days after cessation of the trial (Day 120), at which
time those patients on placebo will be offered a 90 day free treatment with the active
ingredient if they so wish.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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