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Antibacterial Treatment Against Diarrhea in Oral Rehydration Solution

N

Nestlé

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Diarrhea

Treatments

Other: standard oral rehydration solution (ORS)
Other: T4 phage cocktail test
Other: Commercial T4 phage cocktail

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

NCT00937274
08.11.INF

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study hopes to demonstrate the potentials of a new form of therapy for childhood diarrhea, a major cause of morbidity and deaths in Bangladesh and other developing countries, and thus a priority for improving child health.

Full description

This randomized double-blind, placebo controlled trial (RCT) aims to evaluate the effect of oral administered E. coli phage in children aged 4-60 months of age with proven ETEC and EPEC diarrhea. Children will be screened to exclude V. cholerae infections by dark field microscopy, rotavirus by stool ELISA, and invasive diarrhoea clinically as well as by stool microscopy, to identify children with possible ETEC and EPEC diarrhoea. Enrolled children will be randomly assigned, in equal numbers, to receive either: (i) a new T4 phage cocktail or (ii) Russian anti-E. coli phage cocktail (Microgen) at the dose recommended by the manufacturer or (iii) only oral rehydration solution (placebo) for 5 days in addition to management of dehydration and continued feeding in accordance with WHO guidelines. Duration of diarrhea, daily and cumulative stool output, volume of oral rehydration solution intake, stool frequency, time to recovery and weight gain will be the main outcome measures. As the dose of phage we intend to use in this therapeutic trial is higher than the dose administered to young children in earlier safety trial, we plan to initially conduct a safety study with these three study products in 45 children with non cholera, non rotavirus and non invasive diarrhea, to randomize equally in the three intervention groups, as for the final study mentioned above. The outcome measures in this safety part will include assessment of laboratory parameters including renal and liver function tests, haematological indices, and microbiological efficacy of phage by measuring phage and E. coli titre in daily stool samples. If the higher dose is found safe, tolerable, and not associated with any significant adverse event, we will proceed to the clinical efficacy trial.

We believe if T4 coli phage is assessed to be effective in the overall diarrhea management, this might lead to development of an affordable and sustainable adjunct to the currently available case management of E. coli diarrhea, benefiting millions of children worldwide.

Enrollment

120 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

6 to 24 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Sex: male
  2. Age: 6 - 24 months
  3. Better nourished (weight for age > 60 NCHS median)
  4. H/o. diarrhea of less than 48 hours
  5. Written informed consent from either parents/guardian (thumb impression for those who are not literate) for children
  6. Negative test results for dark field microscopy of Vibrio cholerae and ELISA test for rotavirus in initial stool samples

Exclusion criteria

  1. Systemic infection requiring antibiotic treatment
  2. Severe malnutrition (W/A < 60%)
  3. Unwilling to comply with study procedures
  4. Currently participating or have participated in another clinical trial within the last 4 weeks at screening
  5. Clinically significant abnormalities from medical history, physical examination, vital signs, haematology, clinical chemistry results, or other laboratory abnormalities
  6. Clinically suggestive of invasive diarrhea

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

120 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group

Test product
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: T4 phage cocktail test
Commercial product
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Other: Commercial T4 phage cocktail
Standard care
Placebo Comparator group
Treatment:
Other: standard oral rehydration solution (ORS)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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