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The Role of Faecal Bile Acids in the Management of Bile Acid Diarrhoea

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Bowel Diseases
Interventions
Other: IDK Bile Acids
Registration Number
NCT02848040
Lead Sponsor
The Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust
Brief Summary

Bile acid malabsorption (BAM), a common cause of diarrhoea, affects 1 million people in the UK, but is often misdiagnosed as irritable bowel syndrome or goes unrecognised in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.

The SeHCAT (seleno-tauro-homocholic acid) test is currently the only diagnostic test for BAM, but it is not widely available and it is also time consuming, expensive and involves exposure to radioactivity. Some clinicians give a course of blind or empirical treatment instead. The National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) recognised these issues and highlighted the need for cheaper and safer tests to identify BAM.

This study will assess the accuracy of a simple, convenient and inexpensive laboratory test for the rapid diagnosis of BAM which measures bile acids in stool. This test has the potential to have a broad impact on clinical practice and patient care by enabling doctors to identify and treat patients with BAM promptly. Results from the second phase of the study will allow the assessment of the benefits of monitoring the stool test to determine whether the bile acid changes can predict the response to treatment and dosage needed for each patient.

Detailed Description

The prevalence of chronic diarrhoea is 5% of the population, a third of these cases have bile acid malabsorption (BAM).

SeHCAT (seleno-tauro-homocholic acid) testing is the gold standard for BAM, and involves the ingestion of seleno-tauro-homocholic acid, which is limited to a small number of UK centres. NICE reported that although SeHCAT might benefits patients, there was a need to explore alternative technologies.

With limited access to and cost of SeHCAT, many centres use an empirical trial of bile acid sequestrants, without a diagnosis. This may not be effective as many patients are non-adherent.

This pilot study will evaluate a cheaper and simpler laboratory test, which quantitates faecal bile acids. This assay is safer, easier to use, and potentially gives a rapid diagnosis in BAM. The aim is to determine the sensitivity and specificity of this new assay. In the longitudinal phase of this study, further evaluate of faecal bile acids following bile salt sequestrant therapy, will evaluate its role in dose titration.

The following patients will be recruited (i) post-cholecystectomy; (ii) post-terminal ileal resection; or (iii) primary BAM. Patients will have SeHCAT testing and the faecal bile acid concentration will be determined.

Outcomes: The results of faecal bile acid measurement in these patients will be compared with SeHCAT to determine its sensitivity and specificity. Longitudinal follow up will determine the effect of bile salt sequestration on faecal bile acids. These results would inform the design of larger studies, allowing the evaluation of this new test in the NHS.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
112
Inclusion Criteria
  • 18 years age and over
  • Willing to provide informed consent
  • Post-cholecystectomy patients group (n=30; type 3 BAD)
  • Post-terminal ileal resection patients with Crohn's disease group (n=30; type 1 BAD)
  • D-IBS patients with normal SeHCAT retention group (n=30)
  • Idiopathic bile salt diarrhoea with abnormal SeHCAT retention group (type 2 BAD) (n=30)
Exclusion Criteria
  • Pregnancy/ breast feeding
  • Patient participating in another trial
  • Patients unable to give written consent
  • Known established bile salt diarrhoea
  • Recipients of antibiotics in under 4 weeks of initial trial participation

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Single ArmIDK Bile AcidsAll patients will receive the same interventions. Single are only
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
faecal bile acids retention values.12 weeks
SeHCAT retention values12 weeks
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
measurement of bile salt sequestrants12 weeks

descriptive prediction on the response to treatment

measurement of faecal bile acids12 weeks

Sensitivity and specificity of positive and negative predictive values

excretion of faecal bile acids12 weeks

descriptive prediction on the response to treatment

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust

🇬🇧

Wolverhampton, West Midlands, United Kingdom

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