Fatigue Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Efficacy of a Structured Psychoeducational Inflammatory Bowel Disease Group on the Control of Fatigue in an Adult Outpatient Setting for Patients With Objectively Quiescent Disease.
Fatigue is a very frequently reported symptom in patients with inflammatory bowel disease
(IBD), whether it is Crohn's disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC). Sometimes the fatigue
may be easily explained by other symptoms or tests which show that the disease is active.
For example patients may be anaemic (have a low blood count) which can in itself lead to a
feeling of being tired all the time. Treatment of the disease can make some of these
patients feel less fatigued.
However, 4 or 5 out of every 10 patients with IBD which is felt to be in remission (ie not
active disease) report fatigue. This can have far-reaching implications for patients in
their everyday lives, with issues around work or school, close relationships, travel and
leisure being profoundly affected. The CCUK funded research on fatigue and IBD, led by
Professor Christine Norton and Wladzia Czuber-Dochan at King's College London, has
identified fatigue as being a significant issue facing patients and has also highlighted
that few doctors offer help and support beyond treating the disease itself when active. This
is partly because fatigue itself has been difficult to measure and so any study designed to
treat fatigue would be limited by being unable to quantify any improvement in a meaningful
way.
Fortunately the King's College group have developed a 'fatigue score' which is a simple
questionnaire that is able to quantify the severity of fatigue. The aim of our study is to
assess the effect of a structured support and educational programme on the levels of fatigue
in patients with inactive IBD who report moderate or severe levels of fatigue. A secondary
component of our study is to see if there are any associations between fatigue levels and
disease activity or other parameters such as quality of life, anxiety or symptoms of
overlapping irritable bowel syndrome.
Patients will be approached in the out-patient or telephone clinics and the study will be
explained with written information and any questions will be answered. If they agree to
being involved they will be asked to complete the fatigue and a number of other
questionnaires in addition to having the standard assessment of symptoms, blood tests and a
stool specimen. Patients with active disease will be excluded from the subsequent group
interventions but the data they have provided to this point will still be helpful in our
understanding of fatigue in IBD. Patients identified as being in remission following the
initial assessments will be offered the opportunity to be involved in the next stage of the
study. The stool samples will also be analysed for the microbiome ie which bacteria are
present as some studies suggest that patients with IBD may have a reduced diversity of
bacteria in their intestines.
Half of this group will be randomised to active intervention and half will act as a control
group for the rest of the study. The active intervention will involve completion of activity
diaries over the following two weeks and then analysis of the diaries and agreement on
behaviour changes designed to help fatigue. This will be supported by written information
and three, monthly small group sessions to reinforce and support these changes.
At the end of the study all patients will again complete the fatigue and quality of life
questionnaires and have their disease activity assessed by symptom scores, blood and stool
tests. The baseline results and the final results will be analysed to see if there is any
improvement in fatigue in the group undergoing the programme of support and behaviour
change.
This is only a small pilot study but if it demonstrates that the intervention is feasible
and may help with fatigue then a larger study will be performed to try and confirm our
initial findings.
Our ultimate aim is to find a simple intervention to empower patients to deal with the
difficult task of living with IBD and the fatigue that this can bring.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 40 |
Est. completion date | March 2017 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Patiets with IBD in clinical and biochemical remission with no other obvious identifiable explanation for their fatigue Exclusion Criteria: - Patients with active inflammation based on symptoms, blood tests, or stool calprotectin level will be excluded from the subsequent psychological intervention aspect of the study. Patients unable to give informed consent or who are unable to understand and follow the intervention will be excluded |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
The Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Fatigue score | 20 weeks | No |
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