Evaluation of Glycerin Suppositories to Improve Bowel Function in Gastroschisis

NCT ID: NCT03355326

Last Updated: 2021-10-12

Study Results

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

PHASE4

Total Enrollment

16 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2017-10-01

Study Completion Date

2020-10-01

Brief Summary

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Gastroschisis is a congenital defect of the abdominal wall that leads to evisceration of various amounts of the abdominal organs. The mainstay of therapy is restoring continuity of the abdominal wall, either through primary closure or with a synthetic graft when primary closure is not feasible.

It has been established that bowel function after repair of gastroschisis is impaired due to the aforementioned pathological processes. Previous studies have shown that the time from surgery to attaining full nutrition through enteral means is a predictor for morbidity in this population. Therefore, numerous therapeutic interventions have been proposed to help hasten bowel function and decrease the time to tolerance of total enteral nutrition. A common, but unproven, technique is the use of glycerin suppositories to stimulate bowel function. The concept of glycerin suppositories is that stimulating colonic activity through the use of the suppository will stimulate small intestinal function. The underlying concept is that improved bowel motility and reduced time to full enteral feeds will reduce the morbidity associated with this disease. While the formation/evacuation of stools is most easily monitored, the main purpose of using these suppositories is to hasten tolerance of nutrition through enteral means.

While the practice of using glycerin suppositories is common in neonates, there is no literature or best-practice guidelines advocating for (or against) their use. A single previous prospective study utilizing glycerin suppositories in premature, low birth weight neonates failed to show any benefit in improving time to tolerate full enteral feeds. At this time, this is the only study investigating the use of glycerin suppositories in any neonatal population, and due to the indications (i.e. premature and low birth weight infants without surgical disease), the findings are not applicable to neonates with gastroschisis. To the authors' knowledge, there are no previous studies or current ongoing studies examining this question. Given this lack of information regarding the efficacy of glycerin suppositories, there is a significant variation in practice among practicing surgeons, including timing of initial administration, frequency of use, and indication to discontinue. Indeed the spectrum ranges from some surgeons who never use glycerin suppositories, to some who prescribe them daily for all gastroschisis patients immediately following surgery.

The purpose of this study will be to determine whether routine use of glycerin suppositories improves bowel function as measured by time to full enteral feeds (primary outcome: defined as enteral feed volume \>120mL/kg/day with appropriate weight gain (20-30g/day for two consecutive days)) in neonates with uncomplicated gastroschisis after complete reduction of abdominal viscera. Secondary outcomes include time to first bowel movement and incidence/severity of TPN-induced cholestasis in the study groups.

Detailed Description

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Gastroschisis is a congenital defect of the abdominal wall that leads to evisceration of various amounts of the abdominal organs. The mainstay of therapy is restoring continuity of the abdominal wall, either through primary closure or with a synthetic graft when primary closure is not feasible. Closure of the abdominal cavity is confounded by prenatal loss of abdominal domain coupled by resultant swelling of the abdominal viscera due to prenatal exposure to amniotic fluid. Additionally, some patients with gastroschisis have other concomitant abnormalities of the bowel (termed complicated gastroschisis) that require additional surgical intervention.

It has been established that bowel function after repair of gastroschisis is impaired due to the aforementioned pathological processes. Previous studies have shown that the time from surgery to attaining full nutrition through enteral means is a predictor for morbidity in this population. Therefore, numerous therapeutic interventions have been proposed to help hasten bowel function and decrease the time to tolerance of total enteral nutrition. A common, but unproven, technique is the use of glycerin suppositories to stimulate bowel function. The concept of glycerin suppositories is that stimulating colonic activity through the use of the suppository will stimulate small intestinal function. The underlying concept is that improved bowel motility and reduced time to full enteral feeds will reduce the morbidity associated with this disease. While the formation/evacuation of stools is most easily monitored, the main purpose of using these suppositories is to hasten tolerance of nutrition through enteral means.

While the practice of using glycerin suppositories is common in neonates, there is no literature or best-practice guidelines advocating for (or against) their use. A single previous prospective study utilizing glycerin suppositories in premature, low birth weight neonates failed to show any benefit in improving time to tolerate full enteral feeds. At this time, this is the only study investigating the use of glycerin suppositories in any neonatal population, and due to the indications (i.e. premature and low birth weight infants without surgical disease), the findings are not applicable to neonates with gastroschisis. To the authors' knowledge, there are no previous studies or current ongoing studies examining this question. Given this lack of information regarding the efficacy of glycerin suppositories, there is a significant variation in practice among practicing surgeons, including timing of initial administration, frequency of use, and indication to discontinue. Indeed the spectrum ranges from some surgeons who never use glycerin suppositories, to some who prescribe them daily for all gastroschisis patients immediately following surgery.

The purpose of this study will be to determine whether routine use of glycerin suppositories improves bowel function as measured by time to full enteral feeds (primary outcome: defined as enteral feed volume \>120mL/kg/day with appropriate weight gain (20-30g/day for two consecutive days)) in neonates with uncomplicated gastroschisis after complete reduction of abdominal viscera. Secondary outcomes include time to first bowel movement and incidence/severity of TPN-induced cholestasis in the study groups.

Individuals will be followed from the time of consultation by the Pediatric General Surgery service (i.e. at the time of birth) until initial discharge. Neonates undergo abdominal wall closure and reach full nutrition (via either full enteral, total parenteral nutrition, or a combination of both) prior to discharge.

Patients will approached by a study coordinator (Daisy Nunez or Robert Vandewalle) regarding enrollment, which will occur on the day of, or prior to completion of surgical intervention. Randomization into treatment/control arm, utilizing a block technique, will occur after completion of surgical intervention. While the operating surgeon will technically be unaware of the treatment arm of the patient at the time of surgery, neither the medical staff, study participants/families, or study staff be blinded for this study.

After closure of the abdominal wall children will be cared for according to the same standards used in previous/non-trial patients. The only exception is that the control-group patients will not be allowed to be administered glycerin suppositories at anytime and the treatment- group will receive glycerin suppositories (based upon previously established institutional pharmacy dosing protocols) from the first day after abdominal wall closure until they reach full enteral feeds (as defined as 120mL/kg/d with appropriate weight gain) which will be determined by the surgeon of record. Initiation and advancement of enteral feeds will be based upon on protocol developed for this study and agreed upon the study surgeons, who are responsible for nutritional management of these patients (see attached feeding protocol). Signs of feeding intolerance are outline in the attached feeding protocol. Additional metrics will be recorded in the study data sheet (see attached data collection sheet) this information is routinely collected as a part of normal care for patients with gastroschisis but otherwise no additional interventions will be a part of the study protocol. Because the most common morbidities associated with gastroschisis center on infectious complications and those related to prolonged parenteral nutrition, general indicators for these complications (i.e. laboratory and clinical variables) will be recorded as well.

The electronic patient chart will be reviewed on each patient each weekday of the patient's hospital admission (i.e. real time data collection) and the surgery team/study coordinator will contact the attending of record and/or nursing staff for clarification of any missing data. Both study coordinators will review the dataset independently on a weekly basis to help ensure fidelity of the database and data will be backed up on a twice a week basis.

No additional intervention, interaction, or follow up will be completed after the neonate is discharged from their initial admission as part of this study.

Identified barriers to enrollment included timing of delivery/transfer to Riley Hospital for proper enrollment. This will be addressed by the investigators reviewing the general surgery census list on a daily basis to identify patients early and provide time for patient/family consideration for enrollment. Additional enrollment barriers include language barriers which will be addressed with interpreter requests when available and translator phone when live interpreters are not available and/or not feasible.

Conditions

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Gastroschisis

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

SINGLE

Investigators

Study Groups

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Glycerin Suppository Group

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Glycerin Suppository

Intervention Type DRUG

Glycerin suppository is given once daily beginning after conditions described are met and continued until discontinue conditions are met.

Non-suppository Group

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Glycerin Suppository

Glycerin suppository is given once daily beginning after conditions described are met and continued until discontinue conditions are met.

Intervention Type DRUG

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Diagnosis of uncomplicated gastroschisis
* Gestational age \>33 weeks at time of delivery
* Weight \>1900g at time of delivery
* Transfer of patient to Riley Hospital for Children prior to any abdominal surgery

Exclusion Criteria

* Neurological Congenital malformations and/or those known to impair intestinal motility
* Additional congenital gastrointestinal abnormalities requiring surgical intervention
* Congenital Cyanotic heart disease
* Surgical Closure of abdominal wall defect with prosthetic material (e.g. prosthetic or bio-prosthetic mesh)
Minimum Eligible Age

1 Day

Maximum Eligible Age

1 Year

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Indiana University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Alan P. Ladd

Professor of Surgery

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Alan Ladd, M.D.

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Program Director, Department of General Surgery, Divison of Pediatric Surgery

Locations

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Riley Hospital for Children

Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Document Type: Informed Consent Form

View Document

Other Identifiers

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IU-IRB-1611267731

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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