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About
The Microbiota Augmentation to Reestablish Commensal Organisms (MARCO) trial is a single center prospective adaptive phase 1b clinical trial in patients who are hospitalized with complications of liver disease and have low fecal metabolite levels (butyrate and deoxycholic acid). The study intervention is 1 of 9 novel live Commensal Consortia each containing eight commensal bacterial strains derived from healthy donors. The primary objective of the study is to determine safety and tolerability of Commensal Consortia administration.
Full description
The global burden of chronic liver disease (CLD) continues to rise. CLD is often clinically silent until an initial decompensation event, after which care is largely supportive without the ability to significantly modify the underlying disease with current therapies. Due to the high rates of infection in patients with liver disease, empiric, broad spectrum antibiotics are commonly prescribed. This practice is associated with altered gut microbiome compositions, reduced levels of health-promoting bacterial metabolites and high levels of antibiotic resistant organisms, findings that correlate with poor clinical outcomes including infection, repeat hepatic decompensation, re-hospitalization and death.
The primary objective of this clinical trial is to test the safety of commensal bacterial strain combinations designed to reconstitute microbiota compositions and metabolite production in patients with liver disease and profound dysbiosis as measured by low fecal metabolite (butyrate and deoxycholic acid) concentrations. The exploratory outcomes include strain engraftment and bacterial metabolite production.
The trial will occur in two phases. During the first phase, 8 patients will be recruited and administered the same combination of bacterial strains for 7 doses. Patients will be monitored for safety and tolerability. Additionally, fecal samples will be collected to assess for the presence of administered strains and fecal metabolite production.
After the first phase, additional combinations of bacteria will be chosen based upon the safety, engraftment and metabolite production in the first phase. In this adaptive phase, an additional 16 subjects will be enrolled and randomized to one of two additional consortia. In the two phases, a total of 24 patients will be enrolled, and each will be followed for 12 months to assess both primary (safety and tolerability) and exploratory (engraftment and metabolite production) outcomes. The investigators anticipate completing enrollment within 12 months of trial initiation.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Age 18 years or older
Diagnosis of liver disease, liver failure, and/or cirrhosis
All patients will be hospitalized and have a hepatology consult in place.
They will be identified as having liver disease, liver failure, and/or cirrhosis based on a combination of at least one of the following:
Admitted to the hospital for hepatic decompensation
MELD score ≤ 30 at time of enrollment
Subject has ≤ 700µM butyrate and ≤ 10µM deoxycholate in fecal sample
Exclusion criteria
MELD score >30 at time of enrollment
Patients receiving any antibiotics for treatment of an infection.
Chronic or prophylactic antibiotic administration other than rifaximin, ciprofloxacin, or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
-Rifaximin will be either temporarily held or switched to another non-antibiotic therapy (e.g. lactulose or sodium benzoate) during the treatment phase of the trial. Potential subjects in whom the treating hepatologist deem it unsafe to pause or switch from Rifaximin therapy during the 7-10 day treatment phase will be excluded from the study.
Patients who are currently admitted to the intensive care unit for vasoactive support or mechanical ventilation.
Patients meeting the North American Consortia for Study of End Stage Liver Disease (NACSELD) criteria for acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) with ≥ 2 organ failures by NACSELD-ACLF criteria at time of enrollment.
Patients with known intestinal barrier dysfunction, including active GI bleeding, enteropathy (including celiac disease), clinically active inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's or Ulcerative Colitis), ischemic colitis, microscopic colitis, graft versus host disease (GVHD), or gastrointestinal malignancy.
o Active inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) will be defined based on a combination of:
Profoundly immunocompromised patients, including patients with primary immunodeficiency, solid organ transplant recipients, any history of hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), ongoing cancer treatment, neutropenia < 500 cells/mm3, HIV untreated or with CD4 < 200 cells/mm3, immunosuppressive medications, including rituximab, anti-cytokine therapy, anti-rejection medications, chronic corticosteroids (a dose ≥ 20mg of prednisone daily for ≥ 1 month), biologic therapy for autoimmune condition.
Patients with delayed gastrointestinal motility as evidenced by ≤ 2 bowel movements per week at the time of enrollment.
Patients who are allergic to both ampicillin/sulbactam and meropenem.
A history of allergy to any of the investigational products/components.
Patients with liver disease from Hepatitis C.
Patients with existing inflammatory arthritis.
History of total colectomy.
Patients who do not intend to continue their care on a routine basis at the University of Chicago beyond 6 months from the time of enrollment.
Patients with untreated psychiatric conditions, including illicit substance use disorders, that may interfere with reliable follow-up.
Unable to participate based on medical judgement of the care team.
Special populations:
Women of childbearing age will have a:
Another investigational drug or LBP:
Patients who are prescribed ACE-inhibitors and receive a consortium containing C. comes will receive more frequent blood pressure monitoring.
Patients who are prescribed metformin will require either:
If a Vitamin B12 deficiency is discovered, it will be repleted as clinically indicated.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
24 participants in 9 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Matthew A Odenwald, MD, PhD; Christopher Lehmann, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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