Pouchitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study of the Safety and Efficacy of AST-120 in the Treatment of Active Pouchitis
The aim of the study is to assess the safety and efficacy of an investigational agent, AST-120, in treating patients with active pouchitis. This is an open-label trial which means that all patients will receive AST-120 in 2g sachets (packets)three times a day for 4 weeks. All antibiotics, probiotics and nutritional agents must have been discontinued for at least 2 weeks prior to study entry. An initial group of 10 patients will be enrolled. If there are no serious adverse events associated with the study drug and at least 3 of the 10 patients respond, a second group of 10 patients will be enrolled. In the second group of patients, those patients who are considered responders or who are in remission are eligible to receive open-label AST-120 for as long as response is maintained up to a maximum of 52 weeks. Patients will have clinic visits at the start of the study and at week 4. If continuing on open label AST-120 after week 4, patients will have clinic visits every 12 weeks to assess the continuing safety and efficacy of AST-120. Endoscopies will be performed at the start of the study, week 4, week 28, week 52 or early termination.
The management and prognosis vary in different types of pouchitis. For antibiotic-responsive
pouchitis, the first-line therapy includes a 2-week course of metronidazole or
ciprofloxacin. A relapsing course of pouchitis is common. Of the patients with acute
pouchitis, 61% would develop at least one recurrence. Typically, patient's symptoms and
endoscopic and histologic inflammation respond favorably to antibiotic therapy, but symptoms
quickly recur when antibiotics are discontinued. This group of patients is classified as
having antibiotic-dependent pouchitis and often requires long-term antibiotic or probiotic
therapy to keep the disease in remission.
Although the majority of patients with active pouchitis respond favorably to antibiotic
therapy, relapse is common, which often requires frequent antibiotic therapy. The concerns
about frequent use of antibiotic agents are: 1)antibiotics such as metronidazole often cause
adverse effects; 2)long-term or frequent use of antibiotics, including ciprofloxacin,
metronidazole, and rifaximin, often leads to bacterial resistance. In clinical practice, we
have encountered more and more patients with antibiotic-refractory pouchitis, which could
largely be due to overuse of antibiotic agents; 3)UC patients with IPAA have an increased
risk for the development of intra-abdominal infections, such as pouch leaks, abscess, and
cholangitis from primary sclerosing cholangitis, which require antibiotic therapy with
agents similar to the agents used in pouchitis. Bacterial resistance developed from the
overuse of antibiotics for pouchitis might jeopardize the treatment of other intra-abdominal
infections; 4) overuse of antibiotics can lead to overload of certain commensal bacteria or
pathogenic bacteria, leading to pouch inflammation. Therefore, safe and effective agents are
needed to treat active pouchitis, particularly on a long-term basis.
AST-120 is manufactured by Kureha Corporation, Japan. The agent was approved in Japan in
1992 for the treatment of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). It is comprised of
highly adsorptive, porous, spherical carbon particles and is packaged in 2 g sachets for
oral administration designed for the treatment of gastrointestinal diseases. AST-120
consists of black microspheres approximately 0.2-0.4 mm in diameter with high adsorption
ability and large surface area. Composed mainly of carbon (approximately 96%), the clinical
utility of AST-120 is thought to reside in its ability to adsorb low molecular weight
toxins, inflammatory mediators, and harmful bile acid products from the gastrointestinal
tract, preventing local toxicity and their systemic absorption. AST-120 has a selective
adsorption profile for certain acidic and basic organic compounds, and has a significantly
lower adsorptive capacity than activated charcoal for digestive enzymes.
This study is an open-label pilot trial in which all patients will receive AST-120 in 2 g
sachets three times a day (to be taken between meals at 10:00 am, 3:00 pm, and immediately
before going to bed) for 4 complete weeks. AST-120 is a tasteless, odorless, oral
preparation. To take the product, patients will tear open the sachets, drop the contents
directly on their tongue and wash it down with 8 ounces of water. All antibiotics,
probiotics and nutritional agents must have been discontinued for at least 2 weeks prior to
study entry. For purposes of this trial response is defined as a > or = 3 point reduction in
the 18-point PDAI scoring system. Remission is defined as a PDAI score < 7.
The study population will consist of patients with active pouchitis after ileal pouch-anal
anastomosis for Ulcerative Colitis (UC) present with primary symptoms such as increased
stool frequency and abdominal pain. The diagnosis of active pouchitis will be defined by a
PDAI score > 7 points, with a combined assessment of symptoms, endoscopy, and histology.
An initial cohort of 10 patients will be enrolled. Based on the efficacy outcome (at least 3
out of 10 patients responding) and safety outcome (no significant adverse event associated
with study drug) a second cohort of 10 patients will be treated. Patients in the second
cohort who are considered responders (i.e., have had at least a 3 point reduction in the 18
point PDAI scoring system) or who are in remission (PDAI<7) are eligible to receive
open-label AST-120 for as long as response is maintained up to a maximum of 52 weeks. If, at
any time, the patient relapses (PDAI>7 for patients who were in remission, or an increase in
PDAI such that at least a 3 point reduction is not maintained for responders), open-label
treatment will be discontinued and the patient will be removed from the study. Patients will
also discontinue open-label treatment and be removed from the study if warranted by
treatment-emergent safety concerns or if, in the opinion of the investigator, it is in the
patient's best interest to discontinue the study.
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Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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