Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Division of Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Department of Pediatrics, Washington University, School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
BMJ Open. 2017 Sep 24;7(9):e018115. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-018115.
Acute gastroenteritis (AGE) is a common and burdensome condition that affects millions of children worldwide each year. Currently available strategies are limited to symptomatic management, treatment and prevention of dehydration and infection control; no disease-modifying interventions exist. Probiotics, defined as live microorganisms beneficial to the host, have shown promise in improving AGE outcomes, but existing studies have sufficient limitations such that the use of probiotics cannot currently be recommended with confidence. Here we present the methods of a large, rigorous, randomised, double-blind placebo-controlled study to assess the effectiveness and side effect profile of GG (LGG) (ATCC 53103) in children with AGE.
The study is being conducted in 10 US paediatric emergency departments (EDs) within the federally funded Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network, in accordance with current SPIRIT and CONSORT statement recommendations. We will randomise 970 children presenting to participating EDs with AGE to either 5 days of treatment with LGG (10colony-forming unit twice a day) or placebo between July 2014 to December 2017. The main outcome is the occurrence of moderate-to-severe disease over time, as defined by the Modified Vesikari Scale. We also record adverse events and side effects related to the intervention. We will conduct intention-to-treat analyses and use an enrichment design to restore the statistical power in case the presence of a subpopulation with a substantially low treatment effect is identified.
Institutional review board approval has been obtained at all sites, and data and material use agreements have been established between the participating sites. The results of the trial will be published in peer-reviewed journals. A deidentified public data set will be made available after the completion of all study procedures.
NCT01773967.
急性胃肠炎(AGE)是一种常见且负担沉重的疾病,全球每年有数百万儿童受其影响。目前的治疗策略仅限于对症治疗、预防脱水和感染控制,尚无针对疾病本身的干预措施。益生菌被定义为对宿主有益的活菌,已显示出改善 AGE 结局的潜力,但现有研究存在足够的局限性,因此目前不能有信心地推荐使用益生菌。在此,我们介绍了一项大型、严格、随机、双盲安慰剂对照研究的方法,以评估 GG(LGG)(ATCC 53103)在 AGE 患儿中的有效性和副作用特征。
该研究在美国联邦资助的儿科急救护理应用研究网络的 10 个儿科急诊部进行,符合现行 SPIRIT 和 CONSORT 声明的建议。我们将随机分配 970 名患有 AGE 并就诊于参与急诊部的儿童,接受 LGG(每天两次,每次 10 菌落形成单位)或安慰剂治疗 5 天。主要结局是根据改良 Vesikari 量表定义的疾病中度至重度的发生时间。我们还记录与干预相关的不良事件和副作用。我们将进行意向治疗分析,并采用富集设计,在确定存在治疗效果明显较低的亚群的情况下恢复统计效力。
所有地点均获得机构审查委员会的批准,并在参与地点之间建立了数据和材料使用协议。试验结果将发表在同行评议的期刊上。在完成所有研究程序后,将提供一个去标识公共数据集。
NCT01773967。