Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Bile acid diarrhoea (BAD) is a socially debilitating disease with stomach pain, high stool frequency, urgency, and faecal incontinence as the main symptoms. Studies estimate that 1-2% of the population suffers from the disease.
There is an unmet need for more treatment options in patients suffering from BAD.
The investigators hypothesise that atorvastatin treatment lowers bile acid synthesis in patients with bile acid diarrhoea. The investigators will investigate this hypothesis in the current study, BASTA, which is a Randomised, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Crossover, Proof of Concept, Investigator-Initiated, Trial.
Full description
Bile acid diarrhoea (BAD) is a socially debilitating disease with stomach pain, high stool frequency, urgency, and faecal incontinence as the main symptoms. Studies estimate that 1-2% of the population suffers from the disease.
Bile acids are synthesised from cholesterol in hepatocytes through a tightly regulated enzymatic process and then excreted to the gut lumen in response to food ingestion. In a healthy individual 95 % of the bile acids are recycled in the enterohepatic circulation in a tightly regulated process. BAD symptoms arise due to a pathological spill-over of bile acids to the colon.
Currently, individuals with BAD are typically treated with bile acids sequestrants. However, only about 2/3 patients experience an improvement in their symptoms on this treatment. Thus, the possibility of yet another tool in the toolbox is compelling.
Statins are used by millions of patients world-wide to reduce their risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality and are considered safe with overall mild and benign adverse effects. Statins lower the intracellular levels of cholesterol in hepatocytes. As such, atorvastatin could potentially reduce the bile acid production in individuals with BAD leading to a reduction or normalisation of the amount of bile acids secreted to the intestinal lumen and entering the colon. Unpublished results from the investigators' group show a 43 % reduction of serum C4, a biomarker of bile acid synthesis which can also be used to diagnose BAD, in healthy, young men, who were treated with atorvastatin for 14 days (7 days of 40 mg atorvastatin once daily followed by 7 days of 80 mg atorvastatin once daily) compared to placebo treatment.
The investigators hypothesise that atorvastatin treatment lowers bile acid synthesis in patients with bile acid diarrhoea.
The current study aims to investigate whether atorvastatin treatment lowers the synthesis of bile acids, measured via the well-known bile acid synthesis marker C4, in a dose-response manner in patients with severe bile acid diarrhoea. The investigators expect the reduction of bile acid synthesis to lead to a reduction in bile acid diarrhoea symptoms since the pathophysiology of the disease is a spill-over of bile acids to the colon. Specifically, the primary endpoint is the reduction in percentage of C4 at the end of the 80 mg treatment period compared to placebo. Additionally, the investigators will investigate the effect of atorvastatin treatment in patients with severe bile acid diarrhoea on symptoms, hepatobiliary markers, metabolic markers, glycaemic control markers, stool samples and safety.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
20 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Asger B Lund, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal