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Clinical Trial Summary

Background:

Many people suffer from diarrhea every year. In the United States, it leads to about 130,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths a year. Researchers want to test a tool that may show them what germs cause diarrhea. It is a simple paper strip test and doesn t require electric power. This may make it easier for health care workers to more quickly fight diarrheal diseases.

Objective:

To test a tool that may detect what germs cause diarrhea.

Eligibility:

People already enrolled in an active NIH protocol who have diarrhea

Design:

Participants will have 1 or 2 studies. They will give information about their symptoms, current medicines, and basic personal data. They will give a stool sample.

Part of each sample will be tested in a lab. The rest will be stored indefinitely. No personal data will be connected to the samples. The stored samples may be used in future research.

Positive test results will be reported to a participant s primary doctor


Clinical Trial Description

Objective

This is a cross-sectional study to validate a new, simple, rapid and affordable point-of-use pathogen identification research tool (hence forth referred to as the "tool") of diarrheal diseases for potential use in resource limited settings in the future. The tool was developed under the terms of a National Institutes of Health (NIH) approved Clinical CRADA between NINR and GoDx, Inc. The sensitivity and specificity of the tool in identifying several common gastrointestinal (GI) pathogens in stool will be examined in participants with diarrhea. The proposed validation study will constitute the initial assessment of the tool in a healthcare environment. Once the detection validity and technical performance of the tool have been evaluated in this context, the tool will be further tested in low resource healthcare settings.

Study population

Study participants will be recruited from the Washington, DC, metropolitan area using standard NIH recruitment practices, as well as from among participants in two existing protocols (09-NR-0064, 12-NR-0195) which recruit and consent research participants with GI disorders and diseases. Lastly, participants enrolled on other NIH protocols will be recruited. Appropriate stool samples may also be sequestered from an exempt repository protocol (09-NR-N228). All ages, ethnicities and both sexes will be considered for inclusion in this study. The study population would reflect the demographics of the greater Washington DC metropolitan area. Externally recruited participants and participants recruited from existing protocols will be asked to supply stool samples. A total of 800 samples from participants with diarrhea will be included in this study.

Design

Stool samples will be collected from participants with diarrhea for which pathogen testing using the NIH standard of care, BioFire FilmArray GI Pathogen Panel (FDA approved PCR based pathogen diagnostic) by the Department of Laboratory Medicine (DLM) is indicated. Collected stool samples will be tested for pathogens causing GI disease, using the FilmArray GI panel by the DLM. Technicians in the NINR laboratories will test aliquots from the same stool samples using our tool. The tool has been designed for detection of the most common diarrhea causing pathogens. Of primary interest for this study are: Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli - EPEC, Clostridium difficile C. difficile, Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli - EAEC, and Campylobacter spp. Pathogens of secondary interests, but for which the study is not specifically powered, will also be included and are: Shigella sp., Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli - STEC, Salmonella spp., and Cryptosporidium spp. Participants will not receive results from the tool.

Outcome measures

The percent sensitivity (ability to make the correct positive identification), specificity (ability to make the correct negative identification) and 95% confidence intervals will be statistically determined by comparing the results yielded by the tool and the FilmArray GI panel. Controlled laboratory experiments suggest >90% specificity and sensitivity of the tool for the detection of the specified pathogens. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03394040
Study type Observational
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase
Start date February 14, 2019
Completion date December 23, 2019

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