Diarrhea Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Trial of Tap Water Treatment in the Elderly
This study is being conducted in Sonoma County, California.
Gastrointestinal illness and diarrhea are recognized as a significant cause of morbidity and
mortality in the elderly. One study showed that 51% of deaths caused by diarrhea over a
9-year period occurred in individuals over the age of 74 years. Although many infectious
diseases are more problematic in the elderly because of a decline in immune function and a
higher incidence of pre-existing malnutrition and dehydration, it is still not known what
the principal modes of transmission are and which infectious agents are responsible.
The principal objective of this study is to evaluate the ability of in-home treatment of
tapwater to reduce gastrointestinal illness in non-institutionalized elderly individuals.
The trial will test household-level treatment of drinking water by joint use of ultraviolet
light and filtration devices. A secondary objective is an estimate of the incidence of
specific bacterial, viral, and protozoan agents in stool specimens collected from elderly
individuals with gastrointestinal symptoms that might be related to water consumption.
There is heated debate in the United States about the extent to which waterborne infectious
diseases may be transmitted to human beings through drinking water that meets federal
standards for pathogen removal. This debate is even more pronounced among elderly
immunocompromised persons and their health care providers because of the prolonged illness
syndromes (generally gastrointestinal) and even death that may occur in these persons after
the ingestion of infectious agents. Concerns about drinking water have been heightened by
the findings of Payment et. al. in Canada which suggested that approximately 25% of "highly
credible" gastrointestinal illness in a community might be due to drinking water.
Gastrointestinal illness and diarrhea are recognized as a significant cause of morbidity and
mortality in the elderly. One study showed that 51% of deaths caused by diarrhea over a
9-year period occurred in individuals over the age of 74 years (Lew et al. 1991). In a
review of sensitive populations, Gerba et al. (1996) reported case fatality rates for
specific enteric pathogens 10 to 100 times higher in this group compared to the general
population. Although many infectious diseases are more problematic in the elderly because of
a decline in immune function and a higher incidence of pre-existing malnutrition and
dehydration, it is still not known what the principal modes of transmission are and which
infectious agents are responsible.
Furthermore, studies on gastrointestinal illness in the elderly are important now because of
an expanding elderly population and the heightened interest in the development of vaccine
strategies. These developments necessitate a clearer understanding of the relative
contribution of various pathogens to gastrointestinal illness in this population. Although
many agents responsible for gastrointestinal illness have previously been difficult to
identify reliably, state-of-the-art laboratory technology, including molecular methods, now
make such study more feasible. We will use laboratory techniques to identify the specific
causal agents of gastrointestinal illness in the intervention and placebo groups and to
estimate the relative prevalence of these pathogens as a cause of gastrointestinal illness.
This study is a randomized, triple-blinded, placebo-controlled, intervention trial in an
elderly population (i.e. over 55 years of age). The intervention to be tested is
household-level treatment of drinking water by joint use of ultraviolet light and filtration
devices in the form of a point-of-use, countertop unit. The project site is the city of
Sonoma, California, and adjacent regions of southern Sonoma County also served by the Sonoma
County Water Agency, that receive their drinking water from ground water aquifers under the
Russian River. The unit of randomization and intervention will be individual households. The
unit of analysis will be the individual participants within households, adjusted for
intra-household clustering (i.e. the within-household correlation). The participants, the
study investigators and the data analysts will be blinded to the assignment of individual
households to active or placebo device except for one study staff member who will keep the
randomization codes. This un-blinded staff member will not have contact with any of the
study participants, nor will he/she have access to any data on the study participants during
the course of the study.
The primary objective is to determine the incidence of gastrointestinal disease in a group
of households using a home drinking water device (combined filtration/UV light) and in a
group of households receiving a placebo device that is inactive but identical in appearance.
This information will be used to estimate the burden of gastrointestinal illness in an
elderly population due to the consumption, at home, of drinking water that meets regulatory
standards but receives no additional treatment.
A secondary objective is an estimate of the incidence of specific bacterial, viral, and
protozoan agents in stool specimens collected from elderly individuals with gastrointestinal
symptoms, and that might be related to water consumption. To determine the rates of
asymptomatic infections, we will also test stool specimens from individuals who are not
sick. Further questions about seroprevalence of these waterborne pathogens and the immune
response they elicit will be answered by testing serum samples taken from all participants
at critical junctures during the study.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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