Radiation Enteritis Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Double-blind Placebo-controlled Trial of Dietary Supplementation With 15g/Day FOS for Five Weeks in Patients With Endometrial/Cervical Carcinoma or 7.5 Weeks in Patients With Prostate Carcinoma Undergoing Pelvic Radiotherapy.
The study will consist of pair of double-blind placebo-controlled trials of dietary supplementation with 15g/day FructoOligoSaccharide (FOS) for 7.5 weeks in patients with prostate carcinoma or 5 weeks in patients with cervical or endometrial carcinoma who are to undergo pelvic radiotherapy with intent to cure.
The study will consist of pair of double-blind placebo-controlled trials of dietary
supplementation with 15g/day FructoOligoSaccharide (FOS) for 7.5 weeks in patients with
prostate carcinoma or 5 weeks in patients with cervical/endometrial carcinoma who are to
undergo pelvic radiotherapy with intent to cure. Patients having post-operative adjuvant
irradiation will be eligible, but not those having purely palliative treatment for symptom
control. The clinical trials will be based at University College Hospital. Patients will
attend a screening visit, a baseline visit, and follow-up visits at completion of
radiotherapy, and then at three and six months.
Patients will be randomised to take a daily dietary supplement of either placebo (a
non-prebiotic carbohydrate) or FOS (a mixture of 70% oligofructose and 30% inulin), provided
as a single 15g sachet that can be dissolved in water or added to food. Randomisation in the
gynaecological trial will be stratified according to diagnosis. In other respects management
will be that offered routinely to patients undergoing pelvic radiotherapy for prostate
malignancy or endometrial/cervical malignancy.
The studies are powered to detect the primary outcome measure of a clinical response (lower
frequency of acute radiation enteritis/proctitis at 5 or 7.5 weeks respectively) using a
2-sample binomial arcsine where the predicted rate of acute radiation induced bowel disease
when on FOS is 50% and 80% on placebo, to a significance of 0.05 and at a power of 90%.
Fifty-one patients will be required in each group to detect a significant difference between
FOS and placebo. Therefore 110 patients will be recruited to each of the two studies to
allow for attrition.
The primary endpoint will be the clinical gastrointestinal status at 7.5 weeks or 5 weeks at
completion of radiotherapy. This status will be enumerated in comparison with placebo
treated patients from the Birmingham score of intestinal symptoms (a simple clinical score
from 0-15, usually employed in ulcerative colitis). Most patients commencing radiotherapy
for these malignancies will have a pre-treatment score of zero or 1. A score of 4 or more is
indicative of active coloproctitis, and differences of more than 2 points are to be
considered clinically meaningful.
Secondary clinical endpoints will include the quantity of anti-diarrhoeal medication
required, the international harmonised criteria for radiation toxicity, the EuroQol score of
quality of life, and the appearance of the rectal mucosa: as judged endoscopically using the
Baron score (a 0-3 scale usually employed in ulcerative colitis); and semi-quantitatively
from histological assessment.
The Birmingham score and each of the clinical secondary endpoints will be assessed again at
3 and 6 months after completion of the radiotherapy. Endoscopic and histological assessment
will be repeated only at 6 months after completion of radiotherapy.
Laboratory endpoints will include the measurement of short chain fatty acids (SCFA)
(including butyrate) in faeces at baseline and at completion of radiotherapy, and study of
the microbiota profile in the mucosa as determined by fluorescence in-situ hybridization
(FISH). Haematological and biochemical parameters will be monitored as in standard practice.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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