Crohn's Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomised Controlled Trial of Clarithromycin in Active Crohn's Disease
Clarithromycin may be an effective therapy in Crohn's disease. It is a broad spectrum
antibiotic. Crohn's disease, the investigators think, is in some way related to bacteria,
which reside in the bowel.
Previous studies of different types of antibiotic in Crohn's disease have shown encouraging
results. Clarithromycin alters the bacteria in the bowel and gets into cells in the bowel
which may contain bacteria. There is some evidence that clarithromycin can stimulate the
immune system and improve the function of cells involved in killing bacteria in the bowel.
WHAT IS THE PROBLEM TO BE ADDRESSED ?
Lack of effective cure for Crohn's disease.
Effective symptomatic treatment of Crohn's disease can be achieved in approximately 60-80%
using corticosteroids [1] with a similar response to enteral or intravenous feeding. The
benefit is usually short-term however, with more than 50% relapsing within a year [2] and
over 90% of patients with ileocaecal disease eventually requiring at least one surgical
operation [3].
The cause of Crohn's disease is unknown but it is commonly believed to be due in some way to
bacteria: either as an unusual response to the normal intestinal flora or possibly to a
specific infection such as an atypical bacterium. It is typified histologically by the
presence of granulomata (in over 75% of cases) and closely resembles intestinal
tuberculosis, radiologically and histologically. A search for Mycobacteria has produced
conflicting results with one centre claiming that Mycobacterium paratuberculosis DNA can be
detected in the majority of cases [4] but with others finding Mycobacterial DNA in only
about 10% [5]. Studies have shown that a variety of organisms including normal intestinal
bacteria and yeasts can be grown from Crohn's disease mesenteric lymph nodes and that the
lymphocytes within these lymph nodes are manufacturing antibodies that are directed against
a broad range of bacterial antigens so it is a more widely held view that a wide range of
micro-organisms invade the mucosa in Crohn's disease, possibly as a result of a breakdown in
the normal mucosal barrier [6].
WHAT IS THE HYPOTHESIS TO BE TESTED?
That clarithromycin may be an effective therapy in Crohn's disease. It is a broad spectrum
antibiotic that has particularly good penetration into macrophages [7] and may therefore be
effective at eradicating the organisms at the centre of the granulomatous reaction in
Crohn's disease. There is also some evidence suggesting that macrolide antibiotics can
stimulate macrophage proliferation, phagocytosis, chemotaxis and cytocidal activitity [8].
WHY IS A TRIAL NEEDED NOW?
Open label studies have shown promising results with Clarithromycin. A study published in
abstract by Present's group in New York reported a response in 7/12 (58%) whose Crohn's
disease activity index (CDAI) fell by a mean of 130 points (range 79-130) in response to
clarithromycin 500 mg bd for 6 weeks [9].
HAS A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW BEEN CARRIED OUT AND WHAT WERE THE FINDINGS?
A Medline search for " clarithromycin and Crohn's disease" yields only three responses. The
first is the report of an open-label study of a combination of clarithromycin 250 mg bd (or
azithromycin in 3 patients) and rifabutin 450 mg per day given for a mean of 18 months to 52
patients by the St George's Hospital group who are the major protagonists of the
Mycobacterium paratuberculosis hypothesis [10] . They report a response in terms of
"significant fall in Harvey Bradshaw Index" in 93% but CDAI was not reported and many of the
patients seem to have had rather modest elevations of Harvey Bradshaw index on entry. Ten of
the patients also received a quinolone antibiotic and a further 5 received clofazimine. The
other two are reports of clarithromycin in Mycobacterium haemophilum infection including at
least one in a case of apparent Crohn's disease. Review of American Gastroenterological
Association abstracts for the past three years yielded reference [9] and an Australian study
of a triple therapy regimen for Mycobacteria that consisted of rifabutin 450 mg per day,
clarithromycin 750 mg per day, clofazimine 2 mg per kg. Twelve patients were treated for
8-12 months and 10/12 achieved "near complete control" [11].
HOW WILL THE RESULTS OF THIS TRIAL BE USED? This trial will establish whether clarithromycin
is effective in achieving remission in Crohn's disease and would be a significant advance in
non-steroid treatment of active Crohn's disease. If a significant positive result is
observed then further trials of prolonged treatment would be indicated to assess
clarithromycin's effect on the prevention of relapse.
WHAT ARE THE PLANNED TRIAL INTERVENTIONS? Patients will receive either (i) Clarithromycin
S/R 1g od or (ii) placebo tablets of identical size, colour and taste.
WHAT IS THE PROPOSED DURATION OF THE TREATMENT PERIOD? Clarithromycin or placebo therapy
will continue for three months.
WILL HEALTH SERVICE RESEARCH ISSUES BE ADDRESSED? Not Applicable
WHAT IS THE PROPOSED FREQUENCY/DURATION OF FOLLOW UP? Patients will be reviewed after one,
two and four weeks and then monthly for the following two months of treatment. Follow up
thereafter will then be in the gastroenterology outpatient clinics.
HOW WILL THE OUTCOME MEASURES BE MEASURED AT FOLLOW-UP? CDAI will be calculated at baseline
and at each subsequent follow up from the patient's symptom scoring diary, haematocrit and
weight. Similarly the van Hees index will be calculated and serum CRP measured. The IBD
quality of life questionnaire will be completed at baseline and at 3 months.
Patients will also have a diary card to record the details of any other symptoms noted
during the trial to assess adverse effects of the trial treatment.
WHAT ARE THE PROPOSED PRACTICAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR ALLOCATING PATIENTS TO TRIAL GROUPS?
Randomisation will be allocated by the pharmacy department of the hospital.
WHAT ARE THE PROPOSED METHODS FOR PROTECTING AGAINST OTHER SOURCES OF BIAS? Controls (known
only to the Pharmacy Department) will receive placebo tablets which are identical in size
colour and taste. Patients will be stratified according to site of disease into 3 groups:
colonic CD only, perianal disease only and others (ileocolonic, small bowel only).
WHAT IS THE PROPOSED SAMPLE SIZE? 39 patients in each group (active treatment and placebo)
gives a 90% power of excluding a response of 60% (p2) compared to 20% (p1) for placebo at
p<0.05 [16]. The published placebo response rate in active CD being 20%.
WHAT IS THE PLANNED RECRUITMENT RATE? 5 patients per month
ARE THERE LIKELY TO BE ANY PROBLEMS WITH COMPLIANCE? Compliance will be assessed by the
number of returned tablets and assessed as good (<25% returned, fair 25-50% returned and
poor (>50% returned).
WHAT IS THE LIKELY RATE OF LOSS TO FOLLOW UP? 100% follow up should be achievable.
HOW MANY CENTRES WILL BE INVOLVED? One
WHAT IS THE PROPOSED TYPE OF ANALYSIS? For the primary outcome measure the difference in
proportions will be calculated with associated 95% confidence intervals. Formal hypothesis
testing of the primary outcome will then be compared by chi-square test.
Quantitative variables will be compared using repeated measures analysis taking into account
the distribution of each variable [17]
WHAT IS THE PROPOSED FREQUENCY OF ANALYSIS? Once only on completion.
ARE THERE ANY PLANNED SUBGROUP ANALYSES? Data from patients in each stratified group will be
examined separately but formal statistical analysis between the subgroups will use a test
for interaction (Altman DG. Practical Statistics for Medical Research. Chapman & Hall.
London. 1991). We anticipate though, that the main outcome data will be presented for all
the patients together.
WHAT IS THE ESTIMATED RESEARCH COST OF THE TRIAL? To be discussed. Part funding will be
required for research nurse and drug trials pharmacist.
IS THERE AN NHS SERVICE SUPPORT COST OF THIS TRIAL, AND IF SO WHAT IS THE ESTIMATED COST?
The only NHS cost would be modest, involving only the routine testing of full blood count
and CRP which is current practice in the monitoring of patients with relapses of
inflammatory bowel disease.
OVER WHAT PERIOD IS FUNDING REQUESTED? Funding is requested for a 2 year period to cover the
primary trial.
References:
1. Jarnerot G, Sandberg-Gertzen H, Tysk C. Medical therapy of active Crohn's disease. Ball
Clin Gastroenterol 1998;12:73-92.
2. Binder V, Brynskov J. Corticosteroids. in Inflammatory bowel diseases. eds Allan,
Rhodes, Hanauer, Keighley, Alexander-Williams, Fazio. Churchill Livingstone 3rd
Edition. 1997 pp503-12.
3. Farmer RG, Whelan G, Fazio VW. Long term follow up of patients with Crohn's disease:
relationship between clinical pattern and prognosis. Gastroenterology
1985;88:1818-1825.
4. Sanderson JD, Moss MT, Tizzard MLV, Hermon-Taylor J. Mycobacterium paratuberculosis in
Crohn's disease tissue. Gut 1992;33:890-6.
5. Fiddler HM, Thurrell W, Rook GA, Johnson NH, McFadden JJ. Specific detection of
Mycobacterium paratuberculosis DNA associated with granulomatous tissue in Crohn's
disease. Gut 1994;35:506-10.
6. Sartor RB. Current concepts of the etiology and pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis and
Crohn's disease. Gastroenterology Clinics of North America. 1995;24:475-507.
7. Fietta A, Merlini C, Gialdroni Grassi G. Requirements for intracellular accumulation
and release of clarithromycin and azithromycin by human phagocytes. J Chemother
1997;9:23-31
8. Xu G, Negayama K, Yuube K, Hojo S, Yamaji Y, Kawanishi K, Takahara J. Effect of
macrolide antibiotics on macrophage functions. Microbiol Immunol 1996;40:473-479.
9. Rubin PH, Chapman ML, Scherl E, Sachar DB, Stamaty C, Present DH. Clarithromycin in
active Crohn's disease: preliminary results of open label pilot study. Gastroenterology
1996;110:A1005.
10. Gui GPH, Thomas PRS, Tizzard MLV, Lake J, Sanderson JD, Hermon Taylor J. Two year
outcomes analysis of Crohn's disease treated with rifabutin and macrolide antibiotics.
J Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 1997;39:393-400.
11. Borody TJ, Pearce L, Bampton PA, Leis S. Treatment of severe Crohn's disease using
rifabutin- macrolide-clofazimine combination: interim report. Gastroenterol 1998;114:
A938.
12. Best WR, Bccktel JM, Singleton JW, Kern F. Development of a Crohn's disease activity
index. Gastroenterol 1976; 70:439-444.
13. VanHees PAM, van Elteren PH, van Lier HJJ, van Tongeren JHN. An index of inflammatory
activity in patients with Crohn's disease. Gut 1980; : 279-286.
14. Guyatt G, Mitchell A . A new measure of health status for clinical trials in
inflammatory bowel disease. Gastroenterol 1989;96:804-810
15. Irvine EJ, Feagan BG, Wong CJ. Does self administration of a quality of life index for
inflammatory bowel disease change the results? J Clin Epid 1996;49:1177-1185.
16. Fleiss JL. Statistical methods for rates and proportions. John Wiley and Sons 1973
17. Matthews JN, Altman DG, Campbell MJ, Royston P. Analysis of serial measurements in
medical research. BMJ 1990;300:230-5.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03815851 -
Relationship Between Prophylactic Drainage and Postoperative Complications (PPOI) in Crohn's Patients After Surgery
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06100289 -
A Study of Vedolizumab in Children and Teenagers With Ulcerative Colitis or Crohn's Disease
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT02883452 -
A Phase I Study to Evaluate Pharmacokinetics, Efficacy and Safety of CT-P13 Subcutaneous in Patients With Active Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04777656 -
Use of Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet on Top of Standard Therapy Versus Standard Therapy Alone in Unstable Pediatric Crohn's Disease Patients.
|
Phase 3 | |
Terminated |
NCT03017014 -
A Study to Assess Safety and Effectiveness of Adalimumab for Treating Children and Adolescents With Crohn's Disease in Real Life Conditions
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT06053424 -
Positron Emission Tomography Study of Changes in [11C]AZ14132516 Uptake Following Administration of AZD7798 to Healthy Participants and Patients With Crohn's Disease
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05428345 -
A Study of Vedolizumab SC Given to Adults With Moderate to Severe Ulcerative Colitis or Crohn's Disease in South Korea
|
||
Completed |
NCT02508012 -
Medico-economic Evaluation of the Therapeutic Drug Monitoring of Anti-TNF-α Agents in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT02858557 -
The Effect of Diet on Microbial Profile and Disease Outcomes in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT02882841 -
MOlecular BIomarkers and Adherent and Invasive Escherichia Coli (AIEC) Detection Study In Crohn's Disease Patients
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT02417974 -
Prevention of Recurrence of Crohn's Disease by Fecal Microbiota Therapy (FMT)
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT03010787 -
A First Time in Human Study in Healthy Volunteers and Patients
|
Phase 1 | |
Completed |
NCT02542917 -
Home Versus Postal Testing for Faecal Calprotectin: a Feasibility Study
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT02316678 -
Patient Attitudes and Preferences for Outcomes of Inflammatory Bowel Disease Therapeutics
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02154425 -
A Multicenter, Postmarketing Study Evaluating the Concentration of Cimzia® in Mature Breast Milk of Lactating Mothers
|
Phase 1 | |
Completed |
NCT02193048 -
Prospective Evaluation of a Scoring System in Patients Newly Diagnosed With Crohn's Disease
|
||
Completed |
NCT02265588 -
Healthy Approach to Physical and Psychological Problems in Youngsters With IBD (HAPPY-IBD).
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02197780 -
Head-to-head Comparison of Two Fecal Biomarkers to Screen Children for IBD
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT02395354 -
Comparative Prospective Multicenter Randomized Study of Endoscopic Treatment of Stenosis in Crohn´s Disease
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01958827 -
A Study of Adalimumab After Dose Escalation in Japanese Subjects With Crohn's Disease
|
Phase 3 |