Please note that the copy function is not enabled for this field.
If you wish to
modify
existing outcomes, please copy and paste the current outcome text into the Update field.
LOGIN
CREATE ACCOUNT
LOGIN
CREATE ACCOUNT
MY TRIALS
REGISTER TRIAL
FAQs
HINTS AND TIPS
DEFINITIONS
Trial Review
The ANZCTR website will be unavailable from 1pm until 3pm (AEDT) on Wednesday the 30th of October for website maintenance. Please be sure to log out of the system in order to avoid any loss of data.
The safety and scientific validity of this study is the responsibility of the study sponsor and investigators. Listing a study does not mean it has been endorsed by the ANZCTR. Before participating in a study, talk to your health care provider and refer to this
information for consumers
Download to PDF
Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12611000912987
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
23/08/2011
Date registered
25/08/2011
Date last updated
25/08/2011
Type of registration
Retrospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
Esterified starch and oral rehydration solution as a treatment for acute infectious diarrhoea
Query!
Scientific title
A randomized controlled clinical trial in adults and children with acute infectious diarrhoea comparing the effects of high amylose maize starch acetate with high amylose maize starch as adjunct to oral rehydration solution on diarrhoea duration and stool output
Query!
Secondary ID [1]
262908
0
CTRI - Pending
Query!
Universal Trial Number (UTN)
U1111-1113-6538
Query!
Trial acronym
Query!
Linked study record
Query!
Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
Acute infectious diarrhoea
270635
0
Query!
Condition category
Condition code
Oral and Gastrointestinal
270806
270806
0
0
Query!
Other diseases of the mouth, teeth, oesophagus, digestive system including liver and colon
Query!
Infection
270816
270816
0
0
Query!
Other infectious diseases
Query!
Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
Query!
Description of intervention(s) / exposure
High amylose maize starch acetate, 10 g mixed per 200 ml oral rehydration solution (ORS), and consumed every hour and after every loose stool until stool consistency becomes formed or for a total of 72 hours.
Query!
Intervention code [1]
269258
0
Treatment: Other
Query!
Comparator / control treatment
High amylose maize starch, 10 g mixed per 200 ml ORS and consumed every hour and after every loose stool until stool consistency becomes formed or for a total of 72 hours.
Query!
Control group
Active
Query!
Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
279501
0
Duration of diarrhoea defined as time from commencing therapy to first formed stool or 12 hour period without stool. Stool form is assessed by a technician according to the Bristol stool form scale, and formed stool is defined as type IV stool in the scale.
Query!
Assessment method [1]
279501
0
Query!
Timepoint [1]
279501
0
Continuous variable, time from 0-72 hours
Query!
Primary outcome [2]
279502
0
Stool weight in first 24 hours and total diarrhoea stool weight. Stool is collected in lined plastic containers and weighed every twelve hours on an electronic scale by a technician.
Query!
Assessment method [2]
279502
0
Query!
Timepoint [2]
279502
0
Measured every 12 hours till recovery or 72 hours
Query!
Secondary outcome [1]
287762
0
Need for unscheduled (i.e. after initial four hour rehydration period) intravenous fluids. Intravenous fluids are commenced if dehydration persists or worsens at the end of the first six hours of therapy, or dehydration reappears any time during subsequent course despite adequate intake of ORS.
Query!
Assessment method [1]
287762
0
Query!
Timepoint [1]
287762
0
Every 12 hour period till recovery or 72 hours.
Query!
Secondary outcome [2]
287763
0
Proportion of patients who recover from diarrhoea at 24 hours and at 48 hours. Recovery is defined as the passage of two consecutive formed stools (type IV on the Bristol stool form scale).
Query!
Assessment method [2]
287763
0
Query!
Timepoint [2]
287763
0
24 hours and 48 hours
Query!
Secondary outcome [3]
287764
0
Adverse events - serum sodium <120 mmol/L, serum creatinine >4 mg/dL, persistent vomiting
Query!
Assessment method [3]
287764
0
Query!
Timepoint [3]
287764
0
24 hours
Query!
Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
Acute watery diarrhoea of less than three days’ duration and presence of dehydration.
Query!
Minimum age
12
Years
Query!
Query!
Maximum age
75
Years
Query!
Query!
Sex
Both males and females
Query!
Can healthy volunteers participate?
No
Query!
Key exclusion criteria
Bloody diarrhoea
Concomitant illness including malignancy, sepsis, and a history of coronary artery disease or stroke.
Query!
Study design
Purpose of the study
Treatment
Query!
Allocation to intervention
Randomised controlled trial
Query!
Procedure for enrolling a subject and allocating the treatment (allocation concealment procedures)
Consecutive patients presenting to the Emergency services with acute dehydrating diarrhoea will be evaluated by the medical officer and offered inclusion in the study if suitable. The agents used for treatment in intervention and comparator arms are packed in sealed opaque envelopes which are sequentially numbered based on the randomization code. Neither the treating team nor the assessment team nor the patient is aware of the specific treatment received by each patient.
Query!
Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
Permuted block randomization, sequence generated by a computer program
Query!
Masking / blinding
Blinded (masking used)
Query!
Who is / are masked / blinded?
Query!
Query!
Query!
Query!
Intervention assignment
Parallel
Query!
Other design features
Query!
Phase
Phase 2 / Phase 3
Query!
Type of endpoint/s
Efficacy
Query!
Statistical methods / analysis
Query!
Recruitment
Recruitment status
Recruiting
Query!
Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
1/08/2010
Query!
Actual
Query!
Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
Query!
Actual
Query!
Date of last data collection
Anticipated
Query!
Actual
Query!
Sample size
Target
100
Query!
Accrual to date
Query!
Final
Query!
Recruitment outside Australia
Country [1]
3808
0
India
Query!
State/province [1]
3808
0
Tamil Nadu
Query!
Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
269727
0
Government body
Query!
Name [1]
269727
0
Indo-Australian Biotechnology Fund
Query!
Address [1]
269727
0
Department of Biotechnology
Block II, 7th Floor, CGO Complex
Lodi Road, New Delhi 110003
Query!
Country [1]
269727
0
India
Query!
Primary sponsor type
University
Query!
Name
Christian Medical College
Query!
Address
Offoce of the Principal
Christian Medical College
Bagayam
Thorapadi Post Office
Vellore 632002
Query!
Country
India
Query!
Secondary sponsor category [1]
268767
0
Government body
Query!
Name [1]
268767
0
Department of Biotechnology
Query!
Address [1]
268767
0
Department of Biotechnology
Block II, 7th Floor, CGO Complex
Lodi Road, New Delhi 110003
Query!
Country [1]
268767
0
India
Query!
Other collaborator category [1]
252223
0
Individual
Query!
Name [1]
252223
0
Julie Clarke
Query!
Address [1]
252223
0
Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation
Kintore Avenue
Adelaide, SA 5000
Query!
Country [1]
252223
0
Australia
Query!
Other collaborator category [2]
252224
0
Individual
Query!
Name [2]
252224
0
Graeme Young
Query!
Address [2]
252224
0
Flinders Medical Centre
Room 3D230
Bedford Park, SA 5042
Query!
Country [2]
252224
0
Australia
Query!
Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
Query!
Ethics committee name [1]
271695
0
Institutional Review Board
Query!
Ethics committee address [1]
271695
0
Christian Medical College Office of the Principal Bagayam Thorapadi Post Office Vellore 632002
Query!
Ethics committee country [1]
271695
0
India
Query!
Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
271695
0
Query!
Approval date [1]
271695
0
20/01/2010
Query!
Ethics approval number [1]
271695
0
IRB-A9-20-01-2010
Query!
Summary
Brief summary
The hypothesis behind the study is that high amylose maize starch acetate, a functional food that delivers acetate and other short chain fatty acids to the colon, will significantly shorten duration of diarrhoea and reduce diarrhoea stool output in patients with acute gastroenteritis. Short chain fatty acids are normally found in the lumen of the colon in high concentrations, being formed there by fermentation of carbohydrate. Reduction of colonic short chain fatty acids in diarrhoea is likely to prolong diarrhoea and slow recovery. High amylose maize starch, naturally found in several corn serovars, reduces diarrhoea in adults and children with gastroenteritis. We hypothesize that high amylose maize starch acetate, that delivers acetate to the colon besides undergoing fermentation to short chain fatty acids, will shorten diarrhoea to a greater extent than high amylose maize starch. In this double-blind randomized controlled clinical trial, adults with diarrhoea and dehydration will receive standard treatment including oral rehydration solution and early feeding, and in addition will receive either high amylose maize starch acetate or high amylose maize starch. Severely dehydrated patients will first receive intravenous fluids for rehydration followed by randomization. Duration of diarrhoea, diarrhoeal stool weight, need for unscheduled intravenous fluids will all be recorded.
Query!
Trial website
Nil
Query!
Trial related presentations / publications
Nil
Query!
Public notes
Query!
Contacts
Principal investigator
Name
33068
0
Query!
Address
33068
0
Query!
Country
33068
0
Query!
Phone
33068
0
Query!
Fax
33068
0
Query!
Email
33068
0
Query!
Contact person for public queries
Name
16315
0
B.S. Ramakrishna
Query!
Address
16315
0
Department of Gastroenterology
Christian Medical College
Ida Scudder Road
Vellore 632004
Query!
Country
16315
0
India
Query!
Phone
16315
0
+91 416 2282052
Query!
Fax
16315
0
+91 416 2282486
Query!
Email
16315
0
[email protected]
Query!
Contact person for scientific queries
Name
7243
0
B.S. Ramakrishna
Query!
Address
7243
0
Department of Gastroenterology
Christian Medical College
Ida Scudder Road
Vellore 632004
Query!
Country
7243
0
India
Query!
Phone
7243
0
+91 416 2282052
Query!
Fax
7243
0
+91 416 2282486
Query!
Email
7243
0
[email protected]
Query!
No information has been provided regarding IPD availability
What supporting documents are/will be available?
No Supporting Document Provided
Results publications and other study-related documents
Documents added manually
No documents have been uploaded by study researchers.
Documents added automatically
No additional documents have been identified.
Download to PDF