Irritable Bowel Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy and Safety of Chinese Medicine JCM-16021 for Diarrhea-predominant Irritable Bowel Syndrome: a Multicenter, Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo Controlled Clinical Trial
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled clinical trial, in order to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Chinese Medicine JCM-16021 for diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome. All patients will be evaluated for study eligibility at Visits 1 (baseline) and 2 (2 weeks). On visit 2, patients who meet the criteria will be randomly assigned to receive 8-week treatment of either JCM-16021 Granules or JCM-16021 placebo Granules. The investigators, research assistants and participants are not aware of the treatment assignments throughout the study. Treatment codes will only be broken after the completion of study. The assessments at Visit 3 (4-week post treatment) and at visit 4 (end of 8-week treatment) are used to measure treatment response (i.e. changes from baseline). Assessment at visit 5 (end of 8-week follow up) is to determine any sustained response to treatment. All the visits will be carried out in HKBU and CUHK clinics.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 392 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | June 30, 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 65 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. fulfill the diagnostic criteria of diarrhea-predominant IBS (IBS-D); 2. fulfill the diagnostic criteria of diarrhea with TCM pattern of liver depression and spleen deficiency (LDSD); 3. age of 18-65 years (inclusive); 4. participants are voluntary and provide written informed consent. Exclusion Criteria: 1. constipation-predominant, mixed or unsubtyped IBS patients; 2. severe diseases on heart, liver and kidney, hematology or cancer which is diagnosed by traditional Chinese medicines; 3. medical history of organic gastrointestinal diseases (e.g. inflammatory bowel diseases, intestinal tuberculosis, colon polyps), or systemic diseases which could affect gastrointestinal motility (e.g. hyperthyroidism, diabetes mellitus, chronic renal failure, neuropsychiatric diseases) which is diagnosed by traditional Chinese medicines; 4. current concomitant medication with effects on gastrointestinal function (e.g. anticholinergic drugs, calcium channel blockers, 5-HT3 receptor antagonists, antidiarrheal agents, antacids, prokinetic agents, antidepressants, anxiolytics and intestinal flora regulating drugs); 5. medical history of abdominal surgery (e.g. cholecystectomy, etc.); 6. drug or food allergies; 7. pregnancy or breast-feeding; 8. medical history of neurological diseases or psychiatric disorders; 9. currently participating in another clinical trial; 10. taking IBS treatment drugs within 1 week. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
China | Chinese Medicine Clinics of Hong Kong Baptist University | Hong Kong | Hong Kong |
China | Institute of Digestive Disease, The Chinese University of Hong Kong | Hong Kong |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
ZhaoXiang Bian | Chinese University of Hong Kong |
China,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Global Assessment of Improvement (GAI) score | The global symptom improvement will be evaluated by scales (terrible=0, worse=1, slightly worse=2, no change=3, slightly better=4, better=5, excellent=6). | 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Pain responder rate in daily worst abdominal pain scores | Pain responders are defined as that participants who met the daily pain response criteria for at least 50% of the days with diary entries during the observational period of interest. Daily pain response: decrease in the worst abdominal pain scores in the past 24 hours of = 30% compared to baseline (average of daily worst abdominal pain the 2-week prior to randomization). Pain score is ranked from 0 to 10 represented none to most severe. | 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Stool consistency responder rate In daily stool consistency scores | Stool consistency responders are defined as that participants who met daily stool consistency response criterion (ie, score of 1, 2, 3, or 4 or absence of bowel movement if accompanied by =30% decrease in worst abdominal pain scores compared to baseline pain) for at least 50% of days with diary entries during the observational period of interest. Bristol stool scale is defined as 7-point Scale in which a score of 1 = separate hard lumps, 2 = sausage shaped but lumpy, 3 = sausage-like with cracks on the surface, 4 = sausage-like but smooth and soft, 5 = soft blobs with clear cut edges, 6 = fluffy pieces with ragged edges, and 7 = watery with no solid pieces. | 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Efficacy judgement standard of single symptom | Excellent: symptom disappearing; Effective: symptom decreased, scoring declining more than 2 points (including 2 points); Helpful: symptom decreased, scoring declining between 1 point to 2 points; Invalid: no change in symptom. Improvement contains excellent, effective and helpful. Each cardinal symptom total improvement rate will be calculated and then conducted symptom evaluation. |
16 weeks | |
Secondary | Comprehensive efficacy judgement standard of cardinal symptoms | The symptom improvement rate is calculated by "(total scoring of prior treatment - total scoring of post treatment) / total scoring of prior treatment × 100%". Clinical remission is defined as symptom disappearing, symptom improvement rate equal or greater than 80% is excellent, symptom improvement rate between 50% and 80% is helpful, symptom improvement rate under 50% is invalid, and negative symptom improvement rate is deterioration. Total effective rate is based on recovery and excellent cases. | 16 weeks | |
Secondary | TCM pattern improvement | Clinical remission: clinical symptoms and signs disappear or basically disappear, total scoring declining =95%; Excellence: clinical symptoms and signs are significantly improved, total scoring declining = 70%; Effective: clinical symptoms and signs are improved, total scoring declining = 30%; Invalid: clinical symptoms and signs are without obvious improvement or even with exacerbation, total scoring declining < 30%. Remark: calculation formula (nimodipine method) is: [(scoring of prior treatment - scoring of post treatment) / scoring of prior treatment]×100% | 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Quality of life scoring (IBS-QoL) | IBS-QoL includes 34 items and divides into 8 subscales, i.e. dysphoria (Q1), interference with activity (Q2), body image (Q3), health worry (Q4), food avoidance (Q5), social reaction (Q6), sexual (Q7) and relationship (Q8). Each item has a five-point response scale with reverse scoring. After conversion, total scoring will be in 0-100 range. Higher scoring reflects superior quality of life. | 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Irritable Bowel Syndromes-Symptom Severity Score (IBS-SSS) | The IBS-SSS is involved five aspects: the severity of abdominal pain, the frequency of abdominal pain, the severity of abdominal discomfort, defecation satisfaction, and interference with daily life. The range of score is 0-500 points scale. | 16 weeks |
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