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Chronic Rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a chronic inflammatory condition of the nasal passage and paranasal sinuses that places significant burden on affected patients and global healthcare systems.
Current treatments for CRS such as long-term antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs, and surgery often reduce symptoms and signs of disease temporarily, however long-term results are much less satisfactory.
Recently, the theory of a damaged microbiome (dysbiosis) as a cause or promoting factor behind CRS has gained increasing evidence from the scientific community.
A condition of the gut with microbial dysbiosis (c.difficile) has previously employed microbiota transplant treatment with great success in long-term health outcomes. Such treatments are shown to repopulate bacterial microenvironment and restore protective commensal bacterial load.
A pilot study conducted by this study team trialed a novel intervention of a Nasal Microbiota Transplant in a small group of participants. Preliminary results suggested significantly improved CRS symptoms after treatment with a healthy donor microbiota transplant, compared to the pre-transplant baseline. The addition of a randomized-control trial with inclusion of a placebo group is the next step.
In this study, investigators aim to perform a two-arm, double-blinded, phase II randomized controlled clinical trial in order to assess the efficacy of a Nasal Microbiota Transplant against a placebo in a cohort of CRS patients without Nasal Polyps (CRSsNP).
Full description
Current treatments for CRS such as long-term antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs, and surgery often reduce symptoms and signs of disease temporarily, however long-term results are much less satisfactory.
A microbiota therapy, as an alternative treatment to antibiotics, has the potential of improving outcomes for CRS patients long-term, whilst reducing the use of antibiotics in the community.
Several attempts of studies to define the role of microbiota of the nose and paranasal sinuses in health and disease have not yet been able to achieve a universal consensus. This is in part due to the significant inter-individual microbiota variation and complexity within humans. Such challenges have also limited the use of probiotic assemblages of one or a combination of few bacterial species in treatment of CRS.
The data derived from this study will add to our understanding of the role of the microbiome in the airways and its role in interfering with respiratory pathogens and host immunity. This is likely to have implications for CRS microbiome-based therapies, and also other potentially related respiratory conditions such as asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
In this study, investigators will recruit patients suffering from chronic rhinosinusitis without polyps (CRSsNP) and healthy participants that do not have a history of sinonasal disease. The sinus microbiome transplants will occur over a 2 week period, with regular follow up for up to 6-months post intervention. Main outcomes include change in disease severity, symptom severity, inflammatory changes, and microbial composition across the study period. Successful results from this trial may pave the way for a novel therapeutic for CRS patients.
This study has received ethics approval from the Royal Brisbane and Women's Health Human Resource and Ethics Committee (RBWH HREC).
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria (patient):
Inclusion criteria (donor):
Exclusion Criteria:
Exclusion criteria (patient):
Aged <18 or >80 years
Allergy to amoxicillin or clavulanate potassium and Clarithromycin.
Excessive Nasal polyposis
Antibiotic treatment in the last 4 weeks
Patients with a history supporting a diagnosis of immune deficiency will be tested (Immunoglobulin A (IgA), Immunoglobulin M (IgM), Immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgG subclasses, MBL) and /or are immunocompromised due to disease and / or medication ( e.g., insulin dependent diabetes mellitis, systemic corticosteroids)
Patients who live with someone who is severly immunocompromised.
Patients with cystic fibrosis or ciliary dyskinesia
Patients who have been on an active investigational therapy within 2 months of screening
Patients who have clinically significant laboratory abnormalities
Patients who are pregnant, breast feeding or planning to become pregnant during the study
Patients who are not willing to use a double barrier method of contraception during the study that is:-
Patients currently on any medication that may affect the results in an unpredictable manner
The patient does not agree to comply with or is unable to meet all study requirements for the duration of the study period
Patients deemed by the investigator to be unsuitable for participation in the study
Patients who have had Coronavirus-19 (COVID-19) within the last month.
Exclusion criteria (donor):
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
60 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Diane Maresco-Pennisi, PhD; Anders Cervin, MD,FRACS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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