Patients With Dyspeptic Symptoms After Cholecystectomy Clinical Trial
Official title:
MITE (Compound Azintamide Enteric-coated Tablets) in the Treatment of Dyspepsia After Cholecystectomy: a Multicenter, Randomized, Superior, Parallel Controlled Clinical Study
To confirm the clinical efficacy of Compound Azintamide Enteric-coated Tablets in the treatment of patients with dyspepsia after cholecystectomy (such as abdominal distension, abdominal pain/abdominal discomfort, diarrhea/fatty stool, early satiety, belching, loss of appetite, etc.) by comparing with positive control drug, to observe its safety, and to evaluate the quality of life of subjects before and after treatment
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 990 |
Est. completion date | February 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | February 1, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Aged 18-70 years old, male or female; 2. Patients after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, mainly including cholecystectomy due to cholecystitis, gallstones, gallbladder polyps and other benign gallbladder tumors, non-functioning gallbladder; 3. Dyspeptic symptoms occurred 2 weeks after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, including: abdominal distension, abdominal pain/abdominal discomfort, diarrhea/fatty stool, early satiety, belching, loss of appetite; 4. Signed informed consent, agreed to participate in this study. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Patients with abnormal liver function and renal function; 2. Patients with severe heart and lung dysfunction; 3. Patients with neurological, mental illness or other reasons can not cooperate with the study; 4. Patients with advanced malignant tumors or other serious wasting diseases, any unstable chronic diseases and acute diseases, interfere with the efficacy evaluation of this study (such as patients undergoing chemotherapy) and the completion of the trial plan; 5. Patients with biliary obstruction, acute hepatitis, etc., do not use the test drugs and control drugs, and allergic to the test drugs and control drugs; 6. Patients who have taken digestive enzymes and cholagogue drugs by themselves; 7. Pregnant and lactating women; 8. Patients who are participating in other clinical trials; 9. Patients who cannot be followed up on time. Elimination Criteria 1. Failure to take medicine as required, that is,Failure to take medicine or missed doses = 3 times within 1week; 2. Taking other digestive enzymes, cholagogues and prokinetic drugs or drugs affecting digestive enzymes and bile secretion and excretion during the study; 3. Adverse events occur, for the benefit of patients, doctors believe that the drug should not be continued; the results of such cases do not participate in the efficacy statistics, but are related to the safety evaluation. Drop-out Criteria 1. Cases with adverse events and patients are not willing to continue participating in the study. 2. Cases who voluntarily withdrew consent from the study due to poor efficacy and inconvenience in follow-up. 3. cases lost to follow-up due to various reasons. |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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Xinhua Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Symptom assessment | scored according to the severity of symptoms. severity: 0 : asymptomatic.
: The patient can recall symptoms only after being reminded. : There are symptoms, but it does not affect daily life. 3 points: Symptoms are present, affecting daily life. |
28days | |
Primary | Efficacy evaluation | symptom score improvement rate = (symptom score before treatment - symptom score after treatment)/symptom score before treatment × 100%.
Significantly effective: symptom score improvement rate > 75%. Effective: symptom score improvement rate 50% ~ 75% (including 50%). Improvement: symptom score improvement rate of 25% ~ 50% (including 25%). Ineffective: symptom score improvement rate < 25%. Worsening: The symptom score increased after medication. Overall response rate = (number of effective cases + number of significantly effective cases)/total number of cases × 100%. |
28days | |
Secondary | The incidence of adverse events (AE) | Serious adverse events (SAE), such as death or life-threatening, hospitalization or prolonged hospitalization, severe disability or severely impaired organ function, etc. Adverse reaction symptoms are recorded in three levels: mild, moderate and severe, and may be related, may not be related, definitely related, and definitely not related. Mild adverse reactions: The symptoms of adverse reactions are mild and can only be remembered after a doctor's inquiry; severe adverse reactions: the main complaints of adverse reactions are strong, affecting the patient's daily life or the continuation of research; moderate adverse reactions: the severity of adverse reactions is moderate Between degree and severe.
Adverse reactions include any new complaints of discomfort during the study period. If symptoms only worsen during the study, it is not considered an adverse event. Any adverse events should be actively handled |
28days | |
Secondary | Quality of life assessment | The SF-NDI scale was used to assess the impact of dyspeptic symptoms on the quality of life of subjects before and after treatment | 28days | |
Secondary | Pharmacoeconomic evaluation | Pharmacoeconomics includes cost indicators and pharmacoeconomic evaluation indicators that are ultimately used for analysis. Cost indicators include the total direct costs that patients should bear from the start of enrollment to the 28-day follow-up period. From an individual analysis perspective, they include: 1) laboratory inspection costs; 2) medical care and management costs; 3) disease diagnosis costs; 4) The cost of treatment; 5) The cost of treatment of adverse reactions and complications.
Pharmacoeconomics evaluation indicators use cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to calculate the cost-effectiveness ratio for comparison. |
28days |