Irritable Bowel Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Single-Site, Double-Blind, Flexible-Dose, Placebo-Controlled Study of the Efficacy, Tolerability, & Safety of Paroxetine - Controlled Release in the Treatment of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is an extremely common disorder in the U.S population,
affecting somewhere between 9-22% based on community based studies. IBS has a chronic
relapsing course and overlaps with other functional gastrointestinal disorders. It accounts
for high direct medical expenses and indirect costs including a significant degree of
absenteeism. Most studies have suggested that there is a slight predominance among women,
especially those that have suffered some form of physical or sexual trauma. It has been
estimated that up to 25-40% of patients seen by gastroenterologists' are affected by IBS,
and that 70-90% of these patients may have a psychiatric comorbidity, most commonly major
depression and panic disorder, but also including schizophrenia, double depression,
dysthymia and alcohol abuse.
Abdominal pain and disturbance of bowel habits characterize the symptoms of IBS in the
absence of demonstrable structural pathology. The diagnosis of IBS relies upon clinical
criteria alone, as there is no "gold standard" in laboratory findings. The diagnosis is
dependent upon identifying characteristic symptoms, and then differentiating IBS from other
structural bowel disorders. Previously, the diagnosis of IBS was based upon a consortium
recommendation that examined and defined diagnostic criteria for over 100 functional
gastrointestinal disorders. These criteria became the most definitive in the area of
functional disorders and are referred to as the Rome Criteria. During the time since this
consensus, these criteria have been modified, and in 1999 became the foundation for the
second set of diagnostic criteria by consensus, now referred to as the Rome II criteria. The
revised Rome II criteria include only the first part of the original criteria, but now
require the presence of two out of three symptoms relating abdominal pain to bowel symptoms.
We designed our study and a Randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, flexible-dose,
placebo-controlled 12-week study.
Primary and Secondary Efficacy Measures Primary
Change from baseline in:
• Mean composite pain scores (on IVRS) Secondary
Change from baseline in:
- Associated symptoms of IBS (diarrhea, constipation, incomplete emptying, etc.) scores
- IBS Quality of Life scores
- Clinical Global Impression scores of 1 or 2
- Beck Depression Inventory II
- Beck Anxiety Inventory
Safety Measures
Safety and tolerability will be assessed through:
- Recording of spontaneous adverse events throughout the screening, run-in, and treatment
phases of the study
- Conducting the DOTES at defined points during the study
All subjects withdrawn from the study will be followed until complete resolution of adverse
events.
Study Schedule This is a placebo-controlled, double-blinded prospective 12-week study
examining the efficacy of paroxetine extended release form in patients with IBS. Patients
meeting the Rome II criteria for IBS will be recruited from the Duke University Medical
Center Division of Gastroenterology and from the community. Patients found to satisfy these
criteria will be referred for enrollment into this study. The study will be explained and
informed consent obtained. A detailed history about the gastrointestinal symptoms and a
physical exam will be performed. Laboratory evaluations (CBC, chemistry, fecal occult blood,
urinalysis and EKG) will be obtained.
All patients will undergo a MINI at baseline to diagnose any comorbid Axis I psychiatric
disorders, and a physical and sexual abuse history will be elicited. The patients will then
have 1 week of symptom charting using the Interactive Voice Response System (IVRS) to
measure baseline severity of IBS symptoms. Following that, patients will receive a
single-blind placebo for a 1 week period. Those patients having a >25% improvement in
composite pain scores at the end of the placebo week or a CGI of 1 or 2 will be terminated
from the study. Following the 1 week single-blind placebo lead-in, non-responders will be
randomized to active drug or placebo for an additional period of 12 weeks. The patients will
continue to fill out a daily symptom diary using the IVRS and, in addition, will have weekly
visits (biweekly after week 4) to assess symptoms, side-effects, and improvement over the
entire 12-week double-blind period. Those in the active treatment group will receive doses
of Paxil CR in increments of 12.5 mg daily for the first week and increased at 12.5 mg
increments at visit weeks to a maximum of 50 mg daily, as determined by the investigator.
The investigator will adjust dosage based on clinical response. Following the completion of
the double-blind phase, patients on placebo and non-responders to the study drug will be
tapered off the study drug back to 0 over 2 weeks, and they will be referred to their
Primary Care Physician, Internist or Gastroenterologist to be prescribed treatment for
Irritable Bowel Syndrome. Patients on active drug (Paroxetine CR) who were successful
responders during the double-blind phase will be eligible to continue on open label Paxil CR
for an additional period of 6 months plus 2 weeks and will be followed on a monthly basis.
They will complete the IVRS symptom diary for a week during each follow-up month for an
additional 6 months. Those who completed the double-blind phase during the 1st half of the
month (days 1-14) will complete the IVRS symptom diary for the first week beginning the 1st
of the next month; those who completed the double-blind phase during the second half of the
month (days 15-31) will complete the IVRS symptom diary for the first week beginning the 1st
of the month following the next month. At the end of the 6-month period, study medication
for these patients will be tapered back to 0 over 2 weeks, and they will be referred to
their Primary Care Physician, Internist or Gastroenterologist to be prescribed treatment for
the Irritable Bowel Syndrome. Placebo responders in the double-blind phase will not be
eligible to enter the 6-month open label maintenance phase.
Clinical response will be measured in several ways. Abdominal pain severity will be measured
with an ordinal scale rated from 1-9 (1=mild pain/discomfort, 9=very severe
pain/discomfort). Abdominal pain frequency will be measured on a four-point scale (1=pain or
discomfort present only occasionally, 2=pain or discomfort present less than half the day,
3= pain or discomfort present more than half the day, 4=pain or discomfort almost all day).
The same ordinal scale will be used to quantify the distress or discomfort caused by feeling
of incomplete evacuation, bloating or abdominal discomfort, and general level of stress or
tension.
Sample Size Computation and Power Analysis Power considerations The calculations that follow
are computed for the current design with an anticipated difference in pre-and post-treatment
on the mean composite pain scores (on IVRS) of 25% (i.e. a reduction of score from 100 to
75). The means and standard deviations for this computation rely on our previous open-label
studies of paroxetine and citalopram in IBS.
Assuming a strong effect size (0.5) of the primary variable (mean composite pain scores) and
alpha set at 0.05, a projected sample size of 50 can detect the main effects with a power of
greater than 0.95. If a lower effect size is assumed (0.4), a projected sample size of 55
can detect main effects with a power of approximately 0.94. Note that power may be reduced
by attrition of the sample (i.e. dropouts) and also may be limited in testing secondary
hypotheses where a further stratification of sample may be necessary (i.e. if the data is
examined separately in men and women)
It may be more appropriate to have a sample size of 60 which allows for a 20% attrition rate
and can still detect an effect size of 0.4 for the primary variable in the
treatment-completer group with a power greater than 90.
Statistical analyses The study's main hypothesis is that paroxetine (Paxil CR) treatment
will be more effective than placebo in reducing symptoms of IBS.
All statistical tests will be two sided at the 0.05 level of significance. Descriptive
statistics will be used to provide a profile of demographic and outcome measures. Pearson
product moment correlational analyses will be conducted to examine the relationships among
variables. Baseline assessments between the two groups will be compared using chi square for
categorical variables and independent t tests (two tailed) for continuous variables. Between
group (medication/placebo) comparisons for primary and secondary variables will employ
analysis of variance (ANOVA) with repeated measures. Assessments will be taken at baseline
and end of week 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12. Within group analyses (pre and
end-of-treatment) will employ two tailed t tests.
To control for the possibility that current psychopathology might affect subject responding
on interview and self-report instruments and otherwise modulate the treatment effects, the
distribution of BDI-II and BAI scores and life time Axis I diagnoses in the placebo and
control groups will be examined. The potential influence of any unequally distributed
variables will be controlled via analyses-of covariance (ANCOVA) using the unequally
distributed variables as covariates.
After the primary analysis other exploratory analyses will be conducted to test potential
hypotheses for further studies.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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