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Clinical Trial Summary

In the recent past, a deep change in the epidemiology of C. difficile infection has occurred, with a rise in its frequency, severity, and mortality. Both the refractoriness of the infection to standard therapy and its probability of recurrence have also increased, representing a main clinical issue. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) refers to the introduction of a liquid filtrate of stools from a healthy donor into the gastrointestinal tract of a patient for the treatment of specific diseases. FMT has shown outstanding results in the treatment of recurrent C. difficile infection. It can be performed through various routes: nasogastric or nasojejunal tube, upper endoscopy, retention enema, colonoscopy. In a recent systematic review of studies using FMT for the treatment of recurrent C. difficile infection, Cammarota et al. observed that lower gastrointestinal route (colonoscopy, enema) led to the achievement of higher eradication rates than upper delivery (gastroscopy, naso-gastric or naso-jejunal tube) (81-86% vs 84-93%, respectively). In a randomized clinical trial, Van Nood et al. showed the efficacy of FMT by nasojejunal tube in recurrent C. difficile infection. Up to now, data on FMT by lower route come out only by case series and case reports.

The investigators' aim is to compare the efficacy of colonoscopic FMT and standard antibiotic therapy for the treatment of C. difficile infection in a randomized clinical trial


Clinical Trial Description

In the recent past, a deep change in the epidemiology of C. difficile infection has occurred, with a rise in its frequency, severity, and mortality. Both the refractoriness of the infection to standard therapy and its probability of recurrence have also increased, representing a main clinical issue. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) refers to the introduction of a liquid filtrate of stools from a healthy donor into the gastrointestinal tract of a patient for the treatment of specific diseases. FMT has shown outstanding results in the treatment of recurrent C. difficile infection. It can be performed through various routes: nasogastric or nasojejunal tube, upper endoscopy, retention enema, colonoscopy. In a recent systematic review of studies using FMT for the treatment of recurrent C. difficile infection, Cammarota et al. observed that lower gastrointestinal route (colonoscopy, enema) led to the achievement of higher eradication rates than upper delivery (gastroscopy, naso-gastric or naso-jejunal tube) (81-86% vs 84-93%, respectively). In a randomized clinical trial, Van Nood et al. showed the efficacy of FMT by nasojejunal tube in recurrent C. difficile infection. Up to now, data on FMT by lower route come out only by case series and case reports.

The investigators' aim is to compare the efficacy of colonoscopic FMT and standard antibiotic therapy for the treatment of C. difficile infection in an open-label randomized clinical trial The investigators' trial should confirm the clinical results obtained by Van Nood et al. by using a colonoscopy approach.

The investigators' study is an open-label randomized controlled trial, enrolling patients with recurrent C. difficile infection, who are candidates for further antibiotic treatment in accordance with guidelines. Recurrent C. difficile infection is meant as the reappearance of clinical symptoms and positivity of C. difficile toxin test within 8 weeks after the end of the previous therapy. Patients' stool will be screened for detection of parasites and enteric bacterial pathogens to exclude other infective pathogens. Patients with severe clinical features (sepsis, severe dehydration, major co-morbidities), former colectomy, high-risk of endoscopic complications, inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), viral hepatitis, AIDS or syphilis will be excluded.

Patients will be instructed and invited to signal recurrent symptoms and diarrhea after treatment. Monthly clinical and lab checks will be performed for a period of six months after the treatment.

Treatment procedures:

All patients will start therapy with vancomycin for four days before of stratification, with random allocation (1 to 1) to one of the two treatment schemes: 1) FMT, with the infusion in the cecum - through the biopsy channel - of 60-120 gr (depending on production) of donated feces, obtained from the donor within 6 hours from transplantation, and manually homogenized in 100/200 ml of physiological solution; or 2) standard vancomycin-based therapy according to the international recommendations. Colonoscopy will be performed by an expert endoscopist, with mucosal biopsy (when possible) for histology examination. Patients allocated to FMT arm will undergo preparation for colonoscopy (four liters of a solution with saline laxatives). All patient will be instructed on hygiene rules to be followed at the patient's domicile to avoid re-infections at home. Stool donors should preferably be patient's relatives or intimates, must not have taken antibiotics in the last 6 months, should not present significant intestinal symptoms of other intestinal diseases and must result negative at the serum screening for viral hepatitis, AIDS or syphilis. Their stool will be tested for C. difficile, enteric bacteria, intestinal protozoa and helminthes pathogens. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02148601
Study type Interventional
Source Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
Start date July 2013
Completion date November 2014

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