Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02636647 |
Other study ID # |
BAJAJ0021 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
Phase 1
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 2015 |
Est. completion date |
August 2016 |
Study information
Verified date |
June 2022 |
Source |
Hunter Holmes Mcguire Veteran Affairs Medical Center |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Randomized, open-label safety, tolerability study with exploratory endpoints and
pathophysiological evaluation of the FMT
Two groups of outpatients with cirrhosis will be randomized using random sequence generator
into no-treatment and FMT groups.
Description:
Group 1 (FMT group) will undergo the following procedures
Pre-FMT preparation:
We will obtain written informed consent per the IRB guidelines. After the patients are
consented and are eligible, we will perform a detailed medical history and physical exam at
day 0. We will also perform cognitive testing. As in prior studies, we will prescribe
patients an antibiotic regimen. Drawing from ecological principles of microbial niche
environments and data from recurrent Clostridium difficile infection, pre-treatment
antibiotics are likely to increase the probability of disrupting the hosts intrinsic
microbiota and creating an opportunity for a 'healthy' microbiota from the FMT to engraft.
After antibiotics and on the day of FMT:
At day 5, we will re-evaluate patients with a directed interval history and focused physical
exam as needed. After ensuring that they are still candidates according to the
inclusion/exclusion criteria, we will collect stool, urine and blood again for pre-FMT
evaluation and urine for pregnancy tests from eligible women. Cognitive testing will be
performed again.
Preparation and handling of stool for FMT infusion
Standard protocol for handling bio-hazardous material will be employed in order to avoid
contamination and risk to healthcare handlers. Sterile microbiological technique will be
employed during material transfer peri-procedure.
At that point we will provide the fecal material using universal precautions to a standard
retention enema bag. The procedure will be completed by a trained Registered Nurse, Nurse
practitioner, or physician in an outpatient clinic, endoscopy recovery area, or standard
endoscopy unit.
The following will be recorded in all FMTs
- Dose
- Unit ID/Lot# of each treatment
- Expiration Date
- Storage Condition
- FMT retention time (in minutes)
Number of FMT: One administration Duration of Follow-up after FMT: 5 months
Follow-up after FMT:
We will see the patient in clinic the day following FMT (day 6 or FMT+1), day 12 (FMT+7), day
20 (FMT+15), and day 35 (FMT+30), at which point a detailed history regarding abdominal
symptoms, evaluation of infectious complications, hospitalizations or complications of
cirrhosis.
Visits on day 6, day 12 and day 35 will be purely safety associated while, on the day 20
visit, we will repeat the pathophysiological studies.
In order to ensure that we have enough samples, in case patients are not able to return at
day 20, we will also collect all samples at day 12, but will only analyze them in case the
day 20 visit does not occur.
These visits, apart from the visit after FMT, will be ±2 days for patient convenience.
At 5 months post-FMT, subjects will be followed up with a phone call to evaluate potential
SAEs, new onset of transmitted infections, new onset or significant worsening of chronic
medical conditions or suspected unexpected serious adverse reactions that have occurred in
between 35 days and 5 months for reporting purposes.
Samples collected at baseline (before FMT), after antibiotics and at day 15 will be:
1. Stool
2. Blood
3. Urine
Group 2: No treatment arm The group 2 will undergo all sample collections, follow-up and
cognitive testing as in group 1 but without the 5-day antibiotic therapy or the FMT. In
addition, we will also not perform the sample collection that is done after 5 days of
antibiotics in this group since no reasonable change in microbiota are expected over 5 days
without antibiotics. The follow-up of this group will be same as that of the FMT group.