Functional Constipation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Dried Plums (Prunes) vs. Polyethylene Glycol 4000 for Treatment of Functional Constipation in Children - Randomised Controlled Trial
Children with functional constipation according to the Rome IV criteria will be randomly assigned to receive prunes at dose 3.5 g/kg/d (prune group) or Polyethylene Glycol 4000 (PEG group) at dose 0.5 g/kg/d for 4 weeks. Before treatment children with impaction will receive PEG 4000 at the dose 1.5 g/kg for 3-5 consecutive days. The primary outcome measure will be treatment success, defined as ≥3 BM per week with no fecal soiling during last week of the intervention.
We will conduct a randomized open-label trial at the Department of Paediatrics of the Medical
University of Warsaw. The trial will be initiated by the investigators and conducted
independently of any commercial entities. The aim will be to assess the effectiveness of
dried prunes in the management of functional constipation in children in comparison to PEG
4000. Patients will be included into our study when functional constipation will be diagnosed
according to ROME IV criteria. Those patients which will meet inclusion criteria will be
assigned randomly to receive prunes at dose 3,5 g/kg/d in three portions a day, for 4 weeks
(amount of prescribed prunes will be calibrated with the weight that child ought to have on
WHO growth charts at 50th percentile) or PEG 4000 at dose 0,5 g/kg/d once daily orally, for 4
weeks. Parents of the children allocated to the prunes group will receive written information
from dietician how to introduce prunes into child's diet (i.e. prunes should be introduced
every day in three meals; prunes can be chopped or grinded before eating them; prunes can be
eaten alone or child may eat them as a part of bigger meal (which is prefered version);
prunes can be introduced with yoghurt, cereals, nuts and seeds as a morning meal). All
patients will be asked to discontinue any laxatives if they used them previously. In case of
rectal impaction noted on physical examination, PEG 4000 at dose of 1.5 g/kg for 3-5
consecutive days will be recommended. All subjects parents will receive a stool diary to
record the frequency of bowel movements; stool consistency according to Bristol Stool Form
Scale (which refers to 7 pictures of different forms of stool; 1 for hard lumps to 7 for
watery stools); frequency of episodes of fecal soiling, pain during defecation, or abdominal
pain or flatulence; use of additional laxative treatment; and adverse effects during the 4
weeks of the intervention. All patients or their parents (if child is too young) will be
asked to write down selfreported 3 day food diaries on non-consecutive days, 2 d during the
week and 1 d during the weekend to assess fiber intake during the study period .. All
patients will be informed of rescue therapy -when there will be no defecation for 3
consecutive days during ongoing trail, PEG 4000 will be allowed at the dose of 1.5 g/kg/d
until the child will pass a stool.
During the study period, every week investigator will call the patients parents to assess
compliance with the study protocol.
Second visit will take place at the end of the trial (4th week). During this visit,
investigators will collect stool diaries. Prunes used in the study will be purchased by
parents of the children. It will be advised for parents to buy prunes under the trade mark of
"Makar" in order to avoid product composition variability bias. Choice of the trade mark was
taken considering the price of a product.
This study is designed as a randomized, open label controlled trial with 1:1 allocation. In
order to obtain comparable groups, block randomisation will be performed (each block will
contain four patients: two in the intervention group and two in the control group). The
randomisation list will be generated using the statistical program StatsDirect by an
independent person and will be kept by a staff member not involved in the trial.
Based on available data in the literature, we assume that a clinically significant difference
in the effectiveness is 15%. To detect such a difference between the study groups with a
power of 80% and alpha of 5%, a sample of 100 children is needed. Assuming approximately 10%
loss to follow-up, we aim to recruit a total of 110 children for this study.
The Ethical Committee of the Medical University of Warsaw will be asked for approval for the
study before recruitment commenced. Any modifications to the protocol that may affect the
conduct of the study will be presented to the Ethical Committee. Verbal and written
information regarding informed consent will be presented to the caregivers.
All analysis will be conducted on an intention-to-treat basis, including all patients in the
groups to which they are randomized for whom outcomes are available (including drop-outs and
withdrawals). Descriptive statistics will be used to summarize baseline characteristics. The
Student t test will be used to compare mean values of continuous variables for approximating
a normal distribution. For non normally distributed variables, the Mann-Whitney U test will
be used. The chi-square or Fisher exact test will be used, when appropriate, to compare
percentages. For continuous outcomes, differences in means or differences in medians
(depending on the distribution of the data), and for dichotomous outcomes, the RR and number
needed to treat, all with a 95% CI, will be calculated. The difference between study groups
will be considered significant when the 95% CI for RR does not include 1.0, or when the 95%
CI for MD does not include 0. All statistical tests will be 2-tailed and performed at the 5%
level of significance.
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