| Literature DB >> 22559011 |
Stephen J Allen1, Kathie Wareham, Caroline Bradley, Wyn Harris, Anjan Dhar, Helga Brown, Alwyn Foden, Way Yee Cheung, Michael B Gravenor, Sue Plummer, Ceri J Phillips, Dietrich Mack.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibiotic associated diarrhoea complicates 5-39% of courses of antibiotic treatment. Major risk factors are increased age and admission to hospital. Of particular importance is C. difficile associated diarrhoea which occurs in about 4% of antibiotic courses and may result in severe illness, death and high healthcare costs. The emergence of the more virulent 027 strain of C. difficile has further heightened concerns. Probiotics may prevent antibiotic associated diarrhoea by several mechanisms including colonization resistance through maintaining a healthy gut flora.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22559011 PMCID: PMC3447682 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-12-108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Criteria for participant inclusion and exclusion
| | · people aged ≥65 years and admitted to hospital |
|---|---|
| · exposed to one or more antibiotics within the last 7 days or are about to start antibiotic treatment | |
| | · consultant approval to invite patient to join the study |
| | · diarrhoea present1 |
| | · immunocompromise2 |
| | · severe illness requiring high dependency or intensive care3 |
| | · prosthetic heart valve |
| | · |
| · active inflammatory bowel disease4 | |
| | · suspected acute pancreatitis5 |
| | · known compromised gut blood supply6 |
| | · jejunal tube |
| | · previous adverse reaction to probiotics |
| · unwilling to discontinue exiting use of probiotics |
1Defined as 3 or more watery or loose stools (Bristol Stool Form Scale types 5–7) in a 24 h period. 2Sufficient to require isolation and barrier nursing. 3Planned admission to these facilities for observation only is not an exclusion criteria. 4Required specific treatment in past 12 months. 5Abdominal pain with serum amylase/lipase ≫ ×3 institutional upper limit of normal. 6Abnormality or disease of mesenteric vessels or coeliac axis.
Figure 1Participant flow chart. Notes: 1. ABMUHB – Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board; CDDFT – County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust. 2. The patient or next of kin is approached for consent in the afternoon if verbal and written information about the trial is provided in the morning, or the following day if provided in the afternoon. 3. Investigational medicinal product; either 21 capsules of probiotic or placebo.
Baseline demographic and clinic data and risk factors for AAD
| · Age | years |
| · Sex | male; female |
| · Race | white; black; Asian; Chinese; other |
| · Period of recruitment | summer (May – Sept); winter (Oct-March) |
| · Smoking | usual number of cigarettes/day |
| · Alcohol | usual number of units/week |
| · Where admitted from | home; residential care; other hospital; other |
| · Admission type | emergency/unplanned; elective/ planned for procedure or investigation |
| · Admission diagnosis or main cause of admission | |
| · Co-morbidity | hypertension; asthma; diabetes; chronic obstructive airways disease; renal disease; irritable bowel syndrome; dementia; Alzheimer’s disease; other |
| · Previous GI surgery | |
| · Number of hospital admissions in last eight weeks | |
| · Antacid treatment | antacid; H2-receptor antagonist; proton pump inhibitor |
| · Naso-gastric tube | |
| · Duration of hospital stay prior to recruitment | days |
| · Indication for antibiotic treatment | |
| · Antibiotic treatment: antibiotic used1 | single class; 2 classes; 3 or more classes |
| · Antibiotic treatment: total duration | single dose; 1–6 days; 7–13 days; ≥14 days |
1Antibiotics will be classified according to British National Formulary categories (http://www.bnf.org): Penicillins (sub-classified as benzylpenicillin, penicillinase resistant penicillin, broad-spectrum penicillins, anti-pseudomonas penicillins); Cephalosporins (sub-classified as 1st, 2nd and 3rd generation); Carbapenems and other beta-lactams; Tetracyclines; Aminoglycosides; Macrolides; Clindamycin; Sulphonamides and trimethoprim; Metronidazole; Quinolones; Glycopeptides; TB drugs; other.
Outcome measures
| 1. the occurrence of AAD | |
|---|---|
| 2. the occurrence of CDAD | |
| | 1. severity1 and duration of AAD |
| | 2. severity1,2 and duration of CDAD and incidence of recurrence within the 8-12 weeks follow-up period |
| | 3. abdominal symptoms (abdominal pain, bloating, flatus, nausea) |
| 4. well-being and quality of life assessed using the generic measures EQ-5D and the York SF12 (Iglesias 2001) at recruitment and 4 and 8 weeks | |
| | 5. duration of hospital stay |
| | 6. serious adverse effects |
| | 7. acceptability of the probiotic preparation |
| | 8. viability of the probiotic at point of administration |
| 9. cost-effectiveness |
1Frequency and consistency of stools. 2Additional information extracted from the clinical records (e.g. laboratory parameters, findings at sigmoidoscopy, pseudomembraneous colitis, colectomy, death).