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Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the colon characterized by superficial mucosal inflammation. Treatment aims to achieve and maintain remission, improve quality of life, and minimize complications. Advanced therapies, including biologics and small molecules, have significantly improved UC management by targeting specific inflammatory pathways. However, due to the multifactorial nature of UC-driven by genetic, environmental, and microbial factors-many patients do not achieve sustained remission, highlighting a therapeutic ceiling. Gut microbial dysbiosis and immune dysregulation are central to UC pathogenesis, with diet playing a critical role in influencing the gut microbiome. While biologics and small molecules have limitations, innovative approaches like combining fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and dietary interventions with advanced therapies show promise. FMT restores microbial balance, modulates immunity, and reduces inflammation, while dietary modifications, such as anti-inflammatory diets, enhance FMT efficacy by creating a favorable environment for donor microbiota engraftment. The present study is designed to evaluate the efficacy of three different microbiome manipulation strategies- FMT, AID and FMT + AID in combination with advanced therapies in patients with active UC in a 2X2 factorial trial design. Patients would be randomized into four different arms: FMT, AID, FMT+AID and placebo. The advanced therapies (biologics or small molecules) would be given in all four arms as standard therapy. With this design the trial would answer two important questions: a) efficacy of combination treatment with advanced therapies and microbiome manipulation strategies in active UC, and b) comparative efficacy of different microbiome manipulation strategies.
Full description
This study is a multicenter, randomized, factorial-design, double-blind, controlled trial investigating the effects of fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and dietary interventions in patients with mild to moderate, treatment-naïve, active inflammatory bowel disease. The trial is being conducted across multiple clinical centers, with a central microbiome analysis facility.
Randomization and Blinding:
Randomization: Centralized, computerized randomization is employed to ensure balanced treatment allocation. The permuted block method, along with stratification based on disease characteristics, ensures equal distribution across intervention arms Blinding: Patients, investigators collecting clinical data, and endoscopic video assessors are blinded to treatment allocation. The dietitian and endoscopist performing FMT (or sham FMT) are unblinded
Intervention Arms:
Participants are assigned to one of four treatment arms:
FMT + Anti-inflammatory Diet (AID) +Advanced therapy FMT + Sham Diet+ Advanced therapy Sham FMT + AID+ Advanced therapy Sham FMT + Sham Diet+ Advanced therapy FMT is administered via colonoscopy at 0, 2, and 6 weeks, with responders receiving maintenance doses every 8 weeks until week 48
Participant Timeline and Assessments:
Baseline Assessments: Clinical, laboratory, and endoscopic evaluations, including serological tests, inflammatory markers, and microbiome profiling.
Follow-up Schedule: Visits occur at Week 0, Week 6, Week 10, and then every 8 weeks until Week 48.
Endoscopic Monitoring: Colonoscopy is performed at baseline, Week 10, and Week 48. Centralized endoscopic video scoring ensures consistency
Data Collection and Management:
Paper CRF's and Electronic Data: The paper based CRF's will be filled first and then data will be entered into a REDCap software.
Dietary Monitoring: Participants will use the IBD NutriCare mobile application for diet tracking.
Microbiome Analysis: Fecal samples are processed and analyzed at a designated microbiome research center.
Safety Monitoring and Compliance:
Adverse Event Reporting: All safety events, including potential serious adverse events (SAEs), are logged and monitored by the Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB).
Protocol Deviations: Documented and assessed for impact on trial integrity. Training and Quality Control: Regular site training ensures adherence to the protocol, and periodic audits maintain data quality
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220 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Dr Himanshu Narang, DM Gasteroentrology; Prof Vineet Ahuja, DM Gastroenterology
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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