Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02526251

Does the Microbiome in IBD Change Alongside Special Treatment Scenarios?

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
80 (actual)
Sponsor
Nordsjaellands Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this cohort study is to map, during one year in an e-health setting, patients having Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) with mild to moderate activity in relation to dysbiosis (gut bacteria) and inflammation burden measured by disease activity questionnaires (HBI and SCCAI) and Fecal Calprotectin (FC) on any smart phone. And Secondarily how dysbiosis defined by a dysbiosis index (DI) ranging from 1-5 is related to changes in disease activity and FC under different treatments scenarios. Is a certain DI or specific bacteria probes related to increase or reduced relapse rate. Moreover change in above mentioned parameters/indices will also be correlated to QoL and a fatigue score.

Detailed description

Among 2.500 IBD patients the investigators will consecutively from the Gastroenterology out-patient clinic at North Zealand University Hospital recruit in total 120 in the study. At the out-patient consultation IBD patients will be informed about the project and the IBD eHealth nurse ensures that no exclusion criteria met by the patient. Inclusion criteria: IBD patients in remission, SCCAI ≤ 2 (Simple Clinical Colitis Activity Index )) or HBI \< 5 (Harvey \& Bradshaw Activity Index ) or in mild to moderate disease activity ( SCCAI 3-4, HBI \< 16) IBD patients who can read, speak and understand Danish IBD patients that can take advantage of the Internet and wireless network 18years or older. Exclusion criteria: IBD patients with severe disease activity HB \> 16 SCCAI ≥ 5 ) IBD patients with social, medical or psychological issues of a more complex character IBD patients with particularly complex issues such as drug and alcohol problems, severe mental / psychiatric disorders and / or serious social impact. IBD patients who cannot attend due to language barrier or cognitive disorder and IBD patients less than 18 years old. When the patient has agreed to participate in this cohort study, they will measure their fecal calprotectin (FC) on any smart phone, rate their Disease activity (SCCAI or HBI) and send in a fecal sample for dysbiosis analysis/microbiome analysis. The Patients will do this every 3 month or on demand in an ehealth setting (see elaboration below). Patients log in at www.noh.constant-care.dk throughout the project period of 12 months. When the patient log in to the telemedicine platform following scoring must be filled out: * Send in a fecal sample for microbiome analysis/ Dysbiosis index (DI) * Disease activity, respectively SCCAI or HBI. * Quality of life assessment, s - IBDQ * FACIT (Fatigue score) * MARS ( Medical Adherence Rating Scale) * FC, fecal calprotectin mg / kg feces) with SMART phone, rapid home test. If the patients prefer to send the feces test, it will be tested in the Gastro unit lab. at the hospital with SMART phone. The results of the scoring systems will appear to the health professionals and patients in a traffic light manner turning into red, yellow and green. If the patient experiences a recurrence of the disease, it moves from green to either yellow or red area in the traffic graph, and patient will further be instructed to contact Gastro medical clinic project nurse for an early consultation and decision on further treatment initiative. This will also be indicated at the patient's website. If alarm symptoms occurs patients are instructed to contact the project nurse. Thus patients are treated in accordance to national and international guideline.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERobservationalNo intervention

Timeline

Start date
2015-08-01
Primary completion
2017-09-01
Completion
2017-09-01
First posted
2015-08-18
Last updated
2017-09-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02526251. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Does the Microbiome in IBD Change Alongside Special Treatment Scenarios? (NCT02526251) · Clinical Trials Directory