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Clinical Trial Summary

This study is therefore postulated as a clear alternative that evaluates patients´quality of life, and recognises fecal calprotectin as an inflammatory marker. Longitudinal, prospective, multi-center cohort study to measure the impact that the therapeutic attitude (treatment intensification/de-intensification o escalation/de-escalation) has on the quality of life of patients with UC given a colonoscopy revealing mucosal healing (Mayo 0, Mayo 1); considering as treatment intensification/de-intensification a dose increase or decrease on the same line of treatment, and escalation/de-escalation if there is a change to a new line of treatment.


Clinical Trial Description

Research justification: There is not enough evidence on the effect of therapeutic intervention implemented by doctors in patients with IBD, depending on the rate of mucosal healing at colonoscopy. From previous studies the investigators know that patients with a Mayo 1 endoscopic score are at a much greater risk for developing a disease outbreak, thus requiring a treatment escalation more frequently than those Mayo 0 patients. Then, it is needed a study of real clinical practice to evaluate the efficacy of this therapeutic intervention (same treatment or escalation/de-escalation strategy) in patients' quality of life. Objectives: Primary: - After 6 and 12 months, to measure the impact that the therapeutic attitude (treatment intensification/de-intensification o escalation/de-escalation) has on the quality of life of patients with UC given a colonoscopy revealing mucosal healing (Mayo 0, Mayo 1); considering as treatment intensification/de-intensification a dose increase or decrease on the same line of treatment, and escalation/de-escalation if there is a change to a new line of treatment. Secondary: - To evaluate the impact of inflammatory markers at the end of 6 and 12 months (C-reactive protein, fecal calprotectin). - Outbreak risk assessment depending on the intervention developed (same treatment, or escalation/de-escalation). Study design: Longitudinal, prospective, multi-center cohort study. Target population. Patients with an established diagnosis of UC through regular criteria (clinical, analytical, endoscopic, radiological, and/or histological ones), in clinical remission (partial Mayo score ≤2) for at least three months, who had undergone surveillance colonoscopy after 12 months from the study outset, with a Mayo 0 or Mayo 1 endoscopic activity. The coverage of the data collections shall extend to all centers via the REDCap platform. The basal characteristics studied are date of birth and gender, and data associated with characteristics of UC such as date of diagnosis, the extent of the area affected, and ongoing treatment when the assessment is performed (5-ASA, immunomodulatory, and/or biologics). A short 9-item version of the IBD Questionnaire together with an IBD-Control one will be used to register changes across the treatment course at the moment of inclusion (basal), for a maximum period of 2 weeks after colonoscopy. CRP and fecal calprotectin values (both analyzed by each center considering quantitative data) shall be calculated in proportion to the period from 2 weeks prior and 2 weeks after colonoscopy (preventing from collecting feces samples during colonoscopy preparation). Physicians will schedule follow-up appointments to obtain both an IBDQ-9 and an IBD-Control questionnaire and to monitor CRP and fecal calprotectin values as well as changes in treatment at that moment; to identify the appearance in that period of any clinical outbreak (defined as the presence of rectal bleeding together with any of these: need of any remission-induction therapy -including topical treatment-, any treatment escalation -increasing dose levels, topical medication included, or any change in treatment- and requiring hospitalization or colectomy). Sample size planning: At the 95% confidence level and a power of 80%, with a one-sided hypothesis: - To demonstrate a difference in recurrence with no treatment changes, by assuming a recurrence of 36.6% from the Mayo 1 group, and of 9.4% from Mayo 0 group (8), the investigators need 28 patients in each group. - To demonstrate that due to increased treatment, Mayo 0 group does not get better and Mayo 1 group will show a 25% of improvement compared to the no changes-in-treatment plan, a sample of 57 patients per group is needed. - To demonstrate that treatment reduction increases recurrence up to 10% in Mayo 0 group of patients and to 40% in Mayo 1 group compared to the no changes-in-treatment plan, a sample of 14 patients per group is needed. Statistical methods. An electronic anonymized database will save the codified data obtained. Demographic and clinical variables will be characterized by descriptive statistics parameters. Quantitative variables will be measured by medians and interquartile ranges or means and standard deviation. Qualitative variables will take into account absolute and relative frequencies (%), and 95% confidence interval. Statistical tests will be performed using STATA 15 and IBM SPSS Statistics 25 statistical software packages. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05271773
Study type Observational
Source Grupo Espanol de Trabajo en Enfermedad de Crohn y Colitis Ulcerosa
Contact Inmaculada Alonso Abreu
Phone 646555151
Email macuaa@hotmail.com
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date November 18, 2022
Completion date November 30, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04143633 - Low FODMAP Diet on Nutritional Status, Disease Activity and Gut Microbiota in IBS and UC With Normal or Overweight BMI N/A