Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

- (Cause of cholelithiasis) Recently, the average age has increased, and the occurrence of gallstones has increased as the dietary life has been westernized due to the improvement of socio-economic level. When cholesterol increases, the occurrence of gallstones increases. Factors include high-calorie high-fat diet, increasing age, women, pregnant women, obesity, and oral contraceptives. There are cases. As another cause, gallstones occur well even when bile stasis occurs due to a decrease in motility of the gallbladder. These are conditions that lower mobility. And cholelithiasis has a genetic tendency in about 30%. In addition, since the eating habits of the family are similar, the genetic factors and the eating habits overlap, which often leads to the occurrence of cholelithiasis in the family.

- (symptoms of cholelithiasis) In most cases, complaints of non-specific digestive system symptoms, such as abdominal bloating, nausea, and especially indigestion after fatty diet, are often observed. According to domestic reports, the nonspecific symptoms complained by patients with cholelithiasis were indigestion, flatulence, frequent belching, nausea, loss of appetite, diarrhea, and vomiting. In general, many healthy people without gallstones complain of non-specific digestive system symptoms in 50% of cases, and there is a possibility that functional gastrointestinal diseases such as dyspepsia, peptic ulcer, and gastritis may be accompanied by these digestive system symptoms. It is difficult to know whether it is unrelated to gallstones. Symptoms caused by typical cholelithiasis usually have a characteristic that they often improve on their own after a few hours, and the start and end of the symptoms are relatively clear and repeatedly occur. In addition, various symptoms are displayed depending on the presence or absence of inflammation and progression.

- (Principle of treatment of cholelithiasis)

1. Medical treatment: Medical treatment of gallstones is a method of dissolving using drugs to treat cholesterol gallstones in gallbladder stones. In 1973, Nakano et al. [1] published the first example of dissolving cholesterol gallstones using ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA). Currently, UDCA is the only drug administered to patients with asymptomatic or mild symptoms of cholelithiasis in actual clinical practice, and there is no specific prescription drug.

2. Surgical treatment: In the case of indications of cholecystectomy, acute cholecystitis, severe symptoms, chronic cholecystitis with severe thickening of the gallbladder wall, repeated and severe symptoms, porcelain gallbladder, Patients with gallstones of 3 cm or more in size, patients with anomalous pancreato-biliary duct unions, or gallbladder polyps.

- (Study on increasing gallbladder contractility) So far, there have been studies that some drugs increase or decrease gallbladder contractility. Catnach SM et al. [2] reported that erythromycin increased gallbladder contractility in patients with autonomic neuropathy due to diabetes. Sengupta S et al. [3] reported that indoramin (α-adrenergic antagonist), a prokinetic agent, increased gallbladder contractility in patients with cholelithiasis, resulting in a significant decrease in gallbladder volume.

Motilitone® developed in Korea is a gastrointestinal motility stimulator that stimulates 5-HT4 receptors to increase acetylcholine secretion and has a mechanism of contracting smooth muscles, improving symptoms in patients with functional dyspepsia in cholelithiasis It is expected to be able to give, and it is thought to have the effect of preventing the crystallization of bile acids due to an increase in the gallbladder contractility, thereby preventing the formation of gallstones and preventing newly generated gallstones.

To date, there are no special drugs for dyspepsia or pain improvement in patients with cholelithiasis. It is hypothesized that administration of motilitone® will increase the contractile capacity of the gallbladder, thereby improving digestion and preventing further formation of gallstones. As a control group, Gasmotin® was administered to improve functional dyspepsia, and the degree of symptom improvement was measured and compared by completing the Symptom Score Questionnaire for Indigestion between the two groups.


Clinical Trial Description

At Severance Hospital, patients with cholelithiasis with symptoms of indigestion are divided into the Motilitone® and Gasmotin® groups. Provide sufficient oral and written explanation of the clinical trial and obtain consent from the patient who has revealed his willingness to participate. Randomization uses random numbers, and patient assignment by random numbers is managed by a third party who does not have direct contact with the patient or clinical history, and after obtaining consent, the group according to the random number is given and medication is given. It is provided to. Each drug is prescribed for 6 months. The symptom score check should be completed at the first outpatient visit(3 months after administration). We will Check the following items through abdominal ultrasound examination 6 months after administration.

: Gallbladder wall thickening presence and extent, number of gallstones, maximum diameter of gallstones, presence or absence of sludge. The general blood test (CBD) and general chemical test (SMA) are conducted three times at the first outpatient visit(3 months after administration), and the research expenses for 3 months and 6 months are supported by the research fund. In the final analysis, we compare the symptom scores between the two groups through the Student T-test, and compare the blood test and ultrasound using the Chi-square test. We want to confirm the following three things through this study. ① In patients with cholelithiasis with symptoms of dyspepsia, prospective data on the degree of symptom improvement following motilitone administration can be obtained. ② It is possible to evaluate the degree of relief or exacerbation of gallstones through ultrasound examination. ③ It is expected that it will be effective in improving symptoms and alleviating cholelithiasis in patients with dyspeptic cholelithiasis due to increased gallbladder contractility of motilitone. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04350346
Study type Interventional
Source Yonsei University
Contact Ho Kyoung Hwang, Ph.D.
Phone 82+ 10-3396-1646
Email DRHHK@yuhs.ac
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date March 25, 2020
Completion date September 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02738710 - Comparison of Post-operative Pain at Umbilical Wound After Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy With Transumbilical Versus Infraumbilical Incision N/A
Completed NCT04390828 - Effectiveness of Guided Imagery Meditation in Patients With Laparoscopic Gallstone Surgery N/A
Recruiting NCT01383031 - Safety and Efficacy Study of Transumbilical Laparoendoscopic Single Site Cholecystectomy Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT04122261 - A Clinical Study of Chinese Domestic Surgical Robot N/A
Completed NCT04879459 - Impact on Diagnostic Accuracy of a Specific Clinical Ultrasound Practical Teaching
Completed NCT04145843 - Treatment Outcomes in Bile Duct Stones
Recruiting NCT03326154 - Post-Cholecystectomy Quality of Life
Completed NCT03470584 - Vegetarian Diet and Chronic Degenerative Diseases
Recruiting NCT04970030 - Comparison Between Mechanical Intracanal (ML) Lithotripsy and Electrohydraulic Intracolangioscopic (EHL) Lithotripsy in the Treatment of Difficult Main Biliary Tract Lithiasis N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT06223061 - Global Evaluation of Cholecystectomy Knowledge and Outcomes
Recruiting NCT05965466 - The Incidence of Gallstones After Gastrectomy N/A
Completed NCT04980417 - Concomitant Versus Delayed Cholecystectomy for Management of Obesity With Gallstone N/A
Recruiting NCT04915651 - Gallbladder Cryoablation in High-Risk Patients N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT00792389 - Study of the Use of Humidified Warmed Gas and the Effect on Post-Operative Pain in Laparoscopic Cholecystectomies Phase 4
Completed NCT02808546 - The Risk Factors of Symptomatic Gallbladder Stone: Age-Sex Matched Case-control Study Performed in Single Institute N/A
Recruiting NCT06287931 - Probiotics for Gallstones in Post-bariatric Surgery Patients N/A
Terminated NCT03852836 - Evaluation of MRI Sequences for Ultra-rapid Acquisition of Bile Ducts Images N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05704907 - Diagnostic Performance of Dual Energy CT for the Detection of Gallbladder Gallstones N/A
Recruiting NCT01998451 - The Discovery of the Double Sphincter in Gallbladder Phase 4
Completed NCT03804775 - Comparative Analysis of Serum Lipid Profiles in Patients With and Without Gallstones