Fecal Microbiota Transplant for Relapsing Clostridium Difficile Infection in Adults and Children Using a Frozen Encapsulated Inoculum
Fecal Microbiota Transplant (FMT) for Relapsing Clostridium Difficile Infection in Adults and Children Using a Frozen Encapsulated Inoculum
1 other identifier
interventional
20
1 country
1
Brief Summary
Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is the reconstitution of normal flora by a "stool transplant" from a healthy individual to a C. difficile-infected recipient, and has long been a successful approach to recurrent/refractory C. difficile. The purpose of this project is to generate a frozen FMT inoculum from well-screened healthy volunteer donors which can be used repeatedly, particularly in those who do not have a healthy intimate partner or other related donor. Delivery of FMT has been performed colonoscopically, by fecal retention enema, or by the nasogastric route. This study will evaluate the safety and secondarily the efficacy of an inoculum administered by frozen orally-administered capsules. Subjects with recurrent/relapsing C. difficile infection will receive FMT via oral capsules The primary endpoint is assessment of safety as measured by clinical events (GI, procedural, systemic). Efficacy will be defined as a resolution of diarrhea off antibiotics for C. difficile, in the absence of a need for OTHER systemic antibiotics, i.e. resumption of a normal bowel status for the individual. Secondary efficacy endpoints include weight, subjective well-being and relative clinical improvement per standardized questionnaire, and subject qualitative assessment of, and satisfaction with, the transplant procedures. Subjects will be monitored for clinical safety by history and standard exams and the follow-up questionnaire as well as followed closely by phone and in person.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P25-P50 for phase_1
Started Aug 2013
1 active site
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
First Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
July 31, 2013
CompletedStudy Start
First participant enrolled
August 1, 2013
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
August 2, 2013
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
October 1, 2014
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
October 1, 2014
CompletedJuly 19, 2016
July 1, 2016
1.2 years
July 31, 2013
July 15, 2016
Conditions
Keywords
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (1)
Safety
Safety is assessed by clinical symptoms, exam, signs (GI and systemic)
Up to 6 months post-FMT
Secondary Outcomes (1)
Efficacy
Up to 2 months post-FMT
Study Arms (1)
Capsule
EXPERIMENTALFecal microbiota transplant ("stool transplant") from healthy, unrelated donor via frozen capsule
Interventions
Reconstitution of normal flora by a "stool transplant" from a healthy individual to a C. difficile - infected recipient via frozen capsule
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- Patients with refractory, recurrent or relapsing C. difficile infection (CDI) defined as EITHER:
- At least three episodes of mild-to-moderate CDI
- At least two episodes of severe CDI resulting in hospitalization and associated with significant morbidity
- One protracted episode of CDI, defined as at least 3 weeks of ongoing Grade 3 severe symptoms of CDI despite standard antimicrobial therapy for CDI
- We expect that most, but not all, subjects will have tried and failed a taper of vancomycin.
- Willingness to accept risk of unrelated donor stool
- Age 7 and above. Seven is chosen as a lower limit based upon the legal age of assent. Based on the literature, most children aged 7 and above can be taught to swallow even large capsules through simple coaching techniques
- Able to consent for self, or parental assent/child assent as age appropriate
You may not qualify if:
- Delayed gastric emptying syndrome
- Known chronic aspiration
- Swallowing dysfunction or oral-motor dyscoordination.
- Inability or unwillingness to swallow multiple large capsules
- Pregnant women
- Patients with an acute illness unrelated to CDI or an acute exacerbation of underlying comorbid condition
- Patients with comorbidities associated with increased risk of serious infection following bacterial translocation, including but not limited to:
- subjects on major immunosuppressive agents including high dose corticosteroids, calcineurin inhibitors, mTOR inhibitors, lymphocyte depleting biologic agents, anti-TNF agents, and others; chemotherapeutic anti-neoplastic agents\*
- Patients with decompensated liver cirrhosis, advanced HIV/AIDS, recent bone marrow transplant, hypoglobulinemia or other cause of severe immunodeficiency\*
- Patients with a history of significant allergy to foods not excluded from the donor diet
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Sites (1)
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, 02114, United States
Related Publications (1)
Youngster I, Russell GH, Pindar C, Ziv-Baran T, Sauk J, Hohmann EL. Oral, capsulized, frozen fecal microbiota transplantation for relapsing Clostridium difficile infection. JAMA. 2014 Nov 5;312(17):1772-8. doi: 10.1001/jama.2014.13875.
PMID: 25322359BACKGROUND
Related Links
MeSH Terms
Conditions
Interventions
Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Intervention Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Officials
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Elizabeth Hohmann, MD
Massachusetts General Hospital
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- phase 1
- Allocation
- NA
- Masking
- NONE
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Intervention Model
- SINGLE GROUP
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
- PI Title
- Principal Investigator
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
July 31, 2013
First Posted
August 2, 2013
Study Start
August 1, 2013
Primary Completion
October 1, 2014
Study Completion
October 1, 2014
Last Updated
July 19, 2016
Record last verified: 2016-07