Behavioural Treatment for Functional Bowel Symptoms in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
- Conditions
- Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesFunctional Gastrointestinal Disorders
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Behavioural treatment
- Registration Number
- NCT03177044
- Lead Sponsor
- St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne
- Brief Summary
The primary aim of the project is to investigate whether a behavioural training programme improves troublesome bowel symptoms, that people with inflammatory bowel disease continue to have, despite their disease being controlled by medication. The other aim is to determine if there are factors which influence how well the training programme works.
People attending an Inflammatory Bowel Disease clinic in a tertiary hospital, with bothersome bowel symptoms despite disease control, will be asked to join the study. This involves 2 to 6 sessions with a pelvic floor trained physiotherapist over a period of 6 months with further follow up at 12 months..
- Detailed Description
Inflammatory bowel diseases, chiefly Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, are chronic gastrointestinal (gut) conditions which tend to flare up some times and be quiet for other periods of time. They are usually controlled by medication. Inflammatory bowel disease is becoming more common, is usually diagnosed at a young age and is lifelong.
A significant number of people with inflammatory bowel disease can have bowel symptoms which are bothersome even when the disease is quiescent. These symptoms include bowel urgency, frequent toileting, incontinence (leakage), constipation (infrequent bowel actions and/or difficulty emptying the bowel), abdominal pain, rectal pain or abdominal bloating. The symptoms can be very embarrassing or stressful, limiting activities and making life less enjoyable.
People with these bowel symptoms, but without inflammatory bowel disease, respond to a type of therapy called behavioural treatment. We don't know yet if this treatment helps people with inflammatory bowel disease.
Behavioural treatment involves learning about how the bowel works, better ways to manage bowel problems and specific exercises to improve bowel control. Specially trained pelvic floor physiotherapists provide 2-6 sessions, over 6 months, of behavioural treatment which may include the use of biofeedback techniques.
Participants will be asked to complete surveys at the beginning and end of treatment and 12 months later.
There are no recognised risks or unwanted side effects caused by behavioural treatment. The benefits are that people with inflammatory bowel disease will have an alternative low cost, low risk treatment which enables them to self-manage bowel symptoms and improve the quality of their life long term.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 35
- Proven history of inflammatory bowel disease
- Clinical evidence of mild, stable disease or remission
- Mayo score ≤ 4, Harvey Bradshaw index ≤ 7
- Bothersome lower bowel symptoms of any of the following: frequency, urgency, incontinence, difficult evacuation, constipation
- Significant medical or psychiatric comorbidity that in the opinion of the investigators would interfere with bowel function or adherence to the protocol
- Clinically significant narcotic or substance abuse that in the opinion of the investigators would interfere with bowel function or adherence to the protocol
- Recognised eating disorder
- Non- English speaking or illiterate
- Pregnancy
- Previous pelvic floor physiotherapy
- Current participant in another trial
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Behavioural treatment Behavioural treatment 2 to 6 sessions of bowel behavioural training with a pelvic floor physiotherapist
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Patient rating of improvement in symptoms At study completion, up to 12 weeks Proportion of patients achieving a rating of 'moderately improved' or 'substantially improved' on a 7 point Likert scale ranging from 'substantially worse' to 'substantially improved'
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in Brief Cope score From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year 28 item questionnaire assessing patients' strategies for coping with stress
Change in Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score (HADS) From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year 14 item questionnaire indicating presence of anxiety or depression
Change in St Marks Faecal Incontinence Score From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year Faecal incontinence symptom score ranging from 0-24
Change in Personal assessment of Constipation Symptoms (PAC-SYM) score From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year 12 constipation symptoms each rated on a 5 point Likert scale (0=symptom absent to 4 = very severe.
Change in Inflammatory Bowel disease questionnaire (IBDQ) score From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year Disease specific quality of life instrument with 32 questions covering 4 domains - bowel symptoms, systemic symptoms, emotional function, social function
Change in Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire score From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year 9 item questionnaire designed to assess cognitive and emotional perception of illness
Change in Short Form -36 (SF-36) score From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year Generic quality of life score
Change in Euro-Qol (EQ-5D) From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year Generic quality of life tool to calculate quality adjusted life years (QALYs)
Change in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Self-efficacy scale (IBD-SES) From baseline to study completion (up to 12 weeks) and at 1 year Disease specific scale with 29 items assessing how well patients believe they are managing their disease
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
St Vincent's Hospital
🇦🇺Fitzroy, Victoria, Australia