PrePhage - Faecal Bacteriophage Transfer for Enhanced Gastrointestinal Tract Maturation in Preterm Infants

NCT ID: NCT05272579

Last Updated: 2024-11-15

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

EARLY_PHASE1

Total Enrollment

20 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2023-11-07

Study Completion Date

2025-12-31

Brief Summary

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PrePhage - Fecal bacteriophage transfer for enhanced gastrointestinal tract maturation in preterm infants

This pilot triol has the primary goal of demonstrating the safety of transferring viruses and proteins from healthy term infants to preterm infants born between gestational age (GA) 26 + 0 and 30+6. The long-term goal is to develop a safe and effective treatment to prevent the severe gut disease called necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC).

NEC is a common disease in neonatal intensive care units affecting 5-10% of all admitted patients. 15-30% of the affected children die from the disease, and many of the survivors suffer from the effects of extensive gut surgery.

While the disease is caused by many different factors, recent research has shown the gut microbiome to be a central factor in the development of NEC. Furthermore, in the recent years special viruses called bacteriophages have shown potential in the treatment of various diseases.

By collecting feces from healthy, term infants and filtering it thoroughly, the investigators can provide a treatment that contains practically only viruses, proteins and nutrients. It is our belief that giving the preterm infants a mix of viruses including bacteriophages will prevent NEC.

To do this, the investigators will go through 3 stages:

1. Recruiting and following healthy donor infants to study the microbiota and use feces from them to donate in stage 2 and 3
2. Examining the safety of the treatment as well as how it works in preterm piglets
3. Testing the treatment in preterm infants. 10 preterm infants will receive the treatment and 10 preterm infants will receive placebo. The investigators expect to see no serious side effects to the treatment. The investigators hope, but do not expect to be able to see a beneficial effect of the treatment.

If this pilot trial shows promising results, it will be followed be a larger clinical trial.

Detailed Description

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PrePhage - Fecal bacteriophage transfer for enhanced gastrointestinal tract maturation in preterm infants

This pilot trial aims to investigate if fecal filtrate transfers (FFT) to preterm infants is safe and tolerable. To investigate this, the investigators will recruit 20 donor infants and their mothers from time of delivery, and both will be subjected to a novel screening program including blood, urine, breastmilk, fecal screening and standard clinical investigation. Donor fecal samples will be collected from time of birth and with varying intervals for consecutive 3 years for 3 purposes: 1) to conduct safety studies in preterm piglets before transfer to preterm recipient infants, 2) to conduct FFT to preterm infants, and 3) to map normal microbiota development in healthy infants. The feces used for donation will be collected between 2-4 weeks after birth. After 1 year, donated feces will be released for FFT to preterm, but only if the donor infant at this time has been healthy and normally developed. Donors are followed up for consecutive 3 years after birth. Maternal fecal samples will be compared to infant samples, to investigate maternal to infant transfer of microbiota, as well as changes in infant microbiota in response to environment.

20 preterm infants with gestational age between 26 +0 - 30+6 weeks + days, are block randomized to either FFT or saline placebo within 24 hours after birth and the following 3 days, in total 4 donations. The recipients are clinically and biochemically closely monitored by attending staff and the group of investigators according to best clinical practice and predefined clinical observation. The recipients are followed up for consecutive 3 years to evaluate potential late side-effects and to monitor change in fecal microbiome after transplant or placebo.

The primary endpoint is to assess safety of FFT to preterm infants with expected no increase in necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), sepsis and death in the intervention group. The secondary endpoint is to assess if, FFT treatment will reduce incidence of feeding tolerance and improve healthy gut development in recipient preterm infants. The investigators expect to find FFT safe and with fewer cases of NEC and sepsis. The investigators do not expect to prove the effect of the intervention in this study. However, the investigators aim to follow up with a double-blinded multicenter randomized control trial - powered to document our hypothesis - that when colonizing with a healthy microbiome, it is possible decrease incidence of NEC in premature infants.

Conditions

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Necrotizing Enterocolitis Microbial Substitution

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

In a block randomized trial with 14 days of follow up between each step, a total of 10 infants will be treated with fecal filtrate transfer and 10 infants will be treated with placebo. The structure will be: 2+2, 2+2, 2+2, 6+6
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

QUADRUPLE

Participants Caregivers Investigators Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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FFT treatment

Treatment with fecal filtrate transfer in saline solution administered by nasogastric tube

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Fecal Filtrate Transfer

Intervention Type OTHER

Treatment with donated fecal samples filtered to contain practically no bacteria and mainly viruses, including bacteriophages

Placebo Treatment

Treatment with saline solution administered by nasogastric tube

Group Type PLACEBO_COMPARATOR

Placebo

Intervention Type OTHER

Saline solution

Interventions

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Fecal Filtrate Transfer

Treatment with donated fecal samples filtered to contain practically no bacteria and mainly viruses, including bacteriophages

Intervention Type OTHER

Placebo

Saline solution

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Preterm infants born between GA 26+0 and 30+6
* Delivery at RH or transferred to RH NICU within 24 hours of delivery
* Children administered prophylactic antibiotics due to maternal risk factors, specifically: premature rupture of membranes, groub b streptococcus positive, feber during labour
* Signed parental consent


* Women aged 18-45
* Ability to give informed consent

Exclusion Criteria

* Major congenital anomalies or birth defects
* Antibiotics for more than 72 hours after birthExtremely SGA infant (weight SD score \< -3 SD)
* Need for mechanical ventilation or cardiovascular support before first FFT treatment


● Mothers who have severe infection, defined by need for other treatment to support infection-related comorbidities, besides from antibiotics (e.g. inotropic treatment, iv fluid resuscitation)
Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Lise Aunsholt, Neonatologist, Clinical Professor

UNKNOWN

Sponsor Role collaborator

Rigshospitalet, Denmark

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Gustav Riemer Jakobsen

Medical Doctor, Ph.d-student

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Lise Aunsholt, md, phd

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Rigshospitalet, Denmark

Locations

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Rigshospitalet

Copenhagen, , Denmark

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Denmark

Central Contacts

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Gustav R Jakobsen, md

Role: CONTACT

+4550569536

Lise Aunsholt, md, phd

Role: CONTACT

+4561991137

Facility Contacts

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Gustav R Jakobsen, Medical doctor

Role: primary

+4550569536

Lise Aunsholt, MD, ph.d., professor

Role: backup

+4561991137

References

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Kappel SS, Jakobsen GR, Oestergaard KL, Brunse A, Nielsen DS, Aunsholt L. Parental Consent to a Neonatal Clinical Study: The Roles of Uncertainty, Burden of Sample Collection and Societal Expectations. Acta Paediatr. 2025 Oct 6. doi: 10.1111/apa.70333. Online ahead of print.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 41051016 (View on PubMed)

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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Rigshospitalet - PrePhage

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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