Pitt Hopkins Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Microbiota Transfer Therapy for Children and Adults With Both Pitt Hopkins Syndrome and Gastrointestinal Disorders: MTP-101 P
The investigators propose to investigate Microbiota Transfer Therapy (MTT) for treating patients with Pitt-Hopkins Syndrome (PTHS) and gastrointestinal problems (constipation, bloating, abdominal pain). MTT involves a combination of 10 days of oral vancomycin (an antibiotic to kill pathogenic bacteria), followed by 1 day of bowel cleanse using magnesium citrate, followed by 4 days of high dose MTP-101P with an antacid, followed by 12 weeks of a lower maintenance dose of MTP-101P with an antacid.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 20 |
Est. completion date | May 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | February 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 5 Years to 55 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Children ages 5 to <18 years and adults ages 18 to < 55 years with Pitt Hopkins Syndrome (verified by genetic testing) 2. GI disorder as defined below that has lasted for at least 2 years. 3. No changes in medications, supplements, diet, or therapies in the 2 months prior to start of treatment, and no intention to change treatments during Part 1 (all participants) and Part 2 (group B) of the clinical trial. The only exception is GI medications, which may be reduced if symptoms reduce, and any changes during the study will be documented. 4. Review of last year of medical records by the study physician. 5. At least two previous trials of "standard of care" GI treatments that did not alleviate GI symptoms (constipation, diarrhea, bloating, gas, reflux, and/or abdominal pain). Standard of care treatments include laxatives, stool softeners, enemas, suppositories, or similar medications. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Antibiotics in 2 months prior to start of treatment (topical antibiotics are allowed) 2. Probiotics in 2 months prior to start of treatment, or fecal transplant in last 12 months. Foods naturally containing probiotics such as yogurt are allowed. 3. Tube feeding may be an exclusion criterion if the participant requires an unusual diet such as a liquid diet with low fiber. 4. Current severe gastrointestinal problems that require immediate hospital treatment (life-threatening) 5. Ulcerative Colitis, Crohn's Disease, diagnosed Celiac Disease, Eosinophilic Gastroenteritis, or similar conditions 6. Unstable, poor health (based on study physician's opinion), or active malignancy or infection. 7. Recent or scheduled abdominal surgeries 8. Current participation in other clinical trials 9. Females who are pregnant or who are at risk of pregnancy and sexually active with a male partner without effective birth control. We will conduct a pregnancy test on all female participants 12 years and older as part of the screening and at each clinical visit. Males who are sexually active with a female partner without highly effective birth control (IUD or birth control hormones). 10. Allergy or intolerance to the study medications: vancomycin, magnesium citrate, milk powder with chocolate flavoring (which are included in MTP-101P), or the antacid. 11. Clinically significant abnormalities at baseline on the blood safety tests, and confirmed on a second test. The tests include Comprehensive Metabolic Panel, and Complete Blood Count with Differential. Note that some abnormalities may occur due to PTHS, so only those likely to significantly increase risk in this study would be grounds for exclusion, at the discretion of the study physician. See detailed discussion at the end of this section on Interpreting Laboratory Results. re. Eligibility for Admission to Study. 12. Evidence of significant impairment of immune system, or taking medications that can compromise the immune system, and thus increase risk if exposed to multiple-drug resistant bacteria. 13. Substantially decreased kidney function, as evidenced by estimated glomerular filtration rate of <60 mL/min/1.73 m2. This is not normally reported for children on standard laboratory metabolic panels, so in those cases we will use the National Kidney Foundations Pediatric Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) Calculator to calculate the pediatric GFR based on age/height, the Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and serum creatinine from our standard Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP). [https://www.kidney.org/professionals/kdoqi/gfr_calculatorped] This calculator uses the Creatinine-based "Bedside Schwartz" equation (2009) that seems to be the most commonly used calculation for this purpose. 14. Participants who are breastfeeding. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Autism/Asperger's Research Group at Arizona State University | Tempe | Arizona |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Gut-Brain-Axis Therapeutics Inc. | Pitt Hopkins Research Foundation |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Daily Stool Record (DSR) | Participants will report the number of abnormal events during a 14 day period. An event includes no bowel movement during 1 day, unusually hard stool (Bristol Stool Form type 1-2), unusually soft stool (Bristol Stool Form type 6-7), four or more bowel movements in 1 day, abdominal pain, or use of GI medication. The units are number of events regardless of type of event. | Baseline (for 14 days pre-treatment) vs End of Treatment (Days 82-95 of treatment). | |
Primary | Safety Measures (Adverse Events) | Safety will be assessed based on the number of adverse events during treatment for each group (Group A and Group B). Units are number of adverse events. | Days 0 to 99 of treatment | |
Secondary | Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale (GSRS) | An assessment of GI symptoms based on 15 questions, which are then scored in five domains (abdominal pain, reflux, indigestion, diarrhea, and constipation). Symptoms are rated on a 7-point Likert scale including no discomfort at all (1), slight discomfort (2), mild discomfort (3), moderate discomfort (4), moderately severe discomfort (5), severe discomfort (6), and very severe discomfort (7). | Baseline (pre-treatment) vs End of Treatment (After 95 days of treatment) | |
Secondary | Clinical Global Impression - Gastrointestinal (CGI-GI) | This assessment is conducted by the study physician and assess the severity of GI symptoms on a 7-point scale. The severity scale rates the severity of the patient's illness including normal, not at all ill (1), borderline mentally ill (2), mildly ill (3), moderately ill (4), markedly ill (5), severely ill (6), among the most extremely ill patients (7). | Baseline (pre-treatment) vs End of Treatment (After 99 days of treatment) | |
Secondary | Clinical Global Impression - Pitt Hopkins (CGI-PTHS) | This assessment is conducted by the study physician and assess the severity of Pitt Hopkins Symptoms on a 7-point scale. The severity scale rates the severity of the patient's illness including normal, not at all ill (1), borderline mentally ill (2), mildly ill (3), moderately ill (4), markedly ill (5), severely ill (6), among the most extremely ill patients (7). | Baseline (pre-treatment) vs End of Treatment (After 99 days of treatment). | |
Secondary | Parent Global Impressions - Pitt Hopkins: Change in Symptoms (PGI-PTHS-2-Change) | An assessment of Pitt Hopkins Syndrome symptoms that rates the change in symptom severity since the start of treatment. Symptom severity is rated on a 7-point scale including much worse (-3), somewhat worse (-2), slightly worse (-1), no change (0), slightly better (1), somewhat better (2), and much better (3). | End of Treatment (After 95 days of treatment) | |
Secondary | Gastrointestinal Symptoms common in Pitt Hopkins (GI-PTHS) | Assess common symptoms in Pitt Hopkins, including 2 questions about toilet training, a question about GI feeding tubes, and 7 questions about current GI symptom severity including constipation, diarrhea, gas, bloating, pain, reflux/heartburn/regurgitation and vomiting. Symptoms are rated on a 7-point scale from none to extremely severe. | Baseline (pre-treatment) vs End of Treatment (After 95 days of treatment) | |
Secondary | Revised Face Legs Activity Crying Consolability Pain Questionnaire (FLACC) | Modified from the original FLACC for children with cognitive impairment (Malviya et al., 2006). Assess pain in five areas (Face, Legs, Activity, Crying, Consolability) using a three-point scale for each area, resulting in a total FLACC pain scale ranging from zero to 10. | Baseline (pre-treatment) vs End of Treatment (After 95 days of treatment) | |
Secondary | National Survey on treatment Effectiveness for Autism (NSTEA) - Overall Benefit | Assess the effectiveness of MTT on overall benefit (no benefit (0)/slight benefit(1)/moderate benefit (2)/good benefit (3)/great benefit (4)). | End of Treatment (After 95 days of treatment) | |
Secondary | National Survey on treatment Effectiveness for Autism (NSTEA) - Overall Adverse E | Assess the effectiveness of MTT on overall adverse effects of treatment (no adverse effects (0)/mild adverse effects (1)/moderate adverse effects (2)/severe adverse effects (3)). | End of Treatment (After 95 days of treatment) |
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