Diverticulosis, Colonic Clinical Trial
Official title:
Mechanistic Randomized Controlled Trial of Mesalazine in Symptomatic Diverticular Disease
Diverticulosis (bulges in the bowel wall) affects two third of the elderly population in the UK. Diverticular disease and its complications are responsible for 68000 hospital admissions and 2000 deaths per year. It commonly produces recurrent short lived abdominal pain, changes in bowel habit and incontinence. The causes of symptoms are not known and the treatments unsatisfactory. Recent studies have found an association between inflammation, alteration of bowel nerves and symptoms. Mesalazine is an anti-inflammatory drug used in inflammatory bowel conditions, such as ulcerative colitis and crohn's disease. We plan to perform a randomized double blind (neither the patients or the doctors known which treatment the patient is taking) placebo (sham medication) controlled trial of mesalazine in symptomatic diverticular disease patients. We anticipate a reduction in the amount of inflammation, bowel nerve changes and symptoms in patients taking mesalazine compare to those taking the placebo.
Diverticular disease affects two thirds of the elderly population in the United Kingdom.
Only a small fraction of individuals with diverticulosis develop symptoms, perhaps 1 in 10,
for reasons which are not well understood. The symptoms however are quite disabling as we
found in a recent survey which indicated that around 36% suffered recurrent abdominal pain.
Surprisingly, given the severity of the disability there has been very little research into
the factors predicting the development of painful diverticular disease. Recent studies have
indicated however that there may be an inflammatory component since the best predictor of
recurrent abdominal pain is a previous episode of acute diverticulitis.
Just what initiates an attack of acute diverticulitis is poorly understood but may include
the inspissation of fecal material in the diverticulum which then leads to pressure on the
lining epithelium and a break down of barrier function. This allows colonic bacteria to
enter the lamina propria where they cause acute inflammation, attracting pus cells from the
circulating blood and creating micro-abscesses. The resolution of this involves fibrosis and
scaring together with muscular hypertrophy which may well lead to secondary motor
abnormalities. Patients with symptomatic diverticular disease are known to have higher
intraluminal pressures, both at baseline and in response to stimuli such as a meal or
prostigmine.
A recent report in which patients admitted with acute diverticulitis were followed for two
years found that a very high proportion of such individuals subsequently develop recurrent
chronic abdominal pain. Recent work has indicated that this leaves a permanent change in
mucosal innervation. Markers of nerve injury including galanin and substance P are
upregulated in patients with symptoms as opposed to those without. This is the first time
that an objective marker has been shown to distinguish patients on the basis of symptoms.
While acute diverticulitis may be the initiating insult, a chronic low level inflammation
may also be required to maintain visceral hypersensitivity. Where detailed quantitative
histology has been performed in diverticular disease, some individuals have been identified
with a lymphocytic infiltration. In other circumstances, chronic inflammation sensitises
mucosal nerves and is associated with visceral hypersensitivity, something which has also
been noted in symptomatic diverticular disease.
Whether anti-inflammatory agents could reverse this process is as yet unknown but there are
currently available safe and effective treatments for inflammatory bowel disease such as 5
amino-salicylic acid or budesonide which might well be effective and allow further
evaluation of the role of low grade inflammation in symptomatic diverticular disease.
This study aims to investigate the inflammatory, neurological and symptomatic effects of
mesalazine in diverticular disease.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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