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Clinical Trial Summary

Clostridium difficile causes ~453,000 infections and ~29,300 deaths per year in the US, making it the most common hospital acquired infection in the country. C. difficile is an anaerobic bacterium that has the capacity to inhabit the colon of humans and other mammals. Initially thought to be a commensal, it was later found to be associated with antibiotic induced enterocolitis. Since then, it has gradually become one of the most important healthcare associated pathogens. C. difficile infection (CDI) causes colitis, which is inflammation of the colonic mucosa with a spectrum of severity from mild to more protracted diarrhea, abdominal pain, fever, toxic megacolon, sepsis, and in some instances death. Mortality occurs despite the existence of three antibiotic options. CDI is also associated with higher hospital readmission rates, and associated healthcare costs in the US are estimated at 4.8 billion dollars annually. Due to the significance of C. difficile in healthcare, hospital level C. difficile rates are publically reported and closely scrutinized by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid. Standard infection control bundles are proving to be insufficient for controlling the national C. difficile problem. Better understanding of the biological steps preceding clinical infection and reversal of the underlying gut dysbiosis will allow us to curtail our C. difficile epidemic. The present study aims to manipulate the gut microbiota to halt the biological progression of C. difficile. CDI is a serious problem in hematology-oncology patients. The incidence of CDI in the hematology-oncology population is much higher than in other populations and hematology-oncology inpatient units frequently have the highest incidence of CDI cases within an institution. Additionally, hematology-oncology patients have high rates of C. difficile colonization upon hospitalization and more than 50% of patients detected with C. difficile colonization before bone marrow transplantation end up diagnosed with hospital associated CDI. This finding is not trivial as CDI treatment with oral vancomycin causes major and prolonged perturbations of their intestinal microbiota, which has been associated with higher mortality. In addition to the usual complications of CDI, a higher incidence of graft-versus-host-disease has been described in patients with CDI.


Clinical Trial Description

Aim 1/Objective 1. Establish the feasibility of oligosaccharide supplementation and twice a week stool collections among 12 C. difficile colonized hematology-oncology inpatients. It will be determined if at least 70% of the oligosaccharide dosages are taken by at least 8 (>=66%) of the 12 enrolled patients. Additionally, the ability to collect at least 50% of the scheduled stool samples will be evaluated. Aim 1 will provide important information about the ideal food/drink to mix the potato starch supplemented in this study. The knowledge gained in this pilot will be used to design a future phase II or III clinical trial. Aim 2. Explore the impact of oligosaccharide supplementation on C. difficile loads and relative abundance of Firmicutes. All stool samples will undergo 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) and bioinformatics at the MCW's Genomic and Precision Medicine Center and C. difficile quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) at the PI's research laboratory. Historical controls will be obtained from a group of over 450 hematology-oncology inpatients who underwent at least one C. difficile surveillance test and whose stool samples are currently being processed for 16S rRNA by the PI's team. Controls at a 3:1 ratio with cases will be matched based on underlying disease, unit of admission, antibiotic use, baseline C. difficile fecal loads, and baseline relative abundance of Firmicutes. Objective 2a. Evaluate the impact of oligosaccharide supplementation on the change of C. difficile fecal loads when compared to historical controls. Objective 2b. Explore the effect of oligosaccharide supplementation on the change in relative abundance of Firmicutes when compared to historical controls. It is expected a reduction will occur in C. difficile fecal loads during oligosaccharide supplementation when compared to matched controls. Conversely, it is expected an increase in the relative abundance of Firmicutes (or some of its operational taxonomic units; OTUs) during oligosaccharide replacement will occur when compared to matched controls. The knowledge gained with Objectives 2a and 2b will be used to determine the sample size needed to design future phase II or phase III clinical trials. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03778606
Study type Interventional
Source Medical College of Wisconsin
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date June 1, 2019
Completion date August 1, 2021

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