| Literature DB >> 31816065 |
Calman A MacLennan1, Mark S Riddle2, Wilbur H Chen3, Kawsar R Talaat4, Varsha Jain5, A Louis Bourgeois6, Robert Frenck7, Karen Kotloff8, Chad K Porter9.
Abstract
The Shigella controlled human infection model (CHIM) is valuable for assessing candidate Shigella vaccine efficacy and potentially accelerating regulatory approval. The Shigella CHIM is currently being conducted at 3 sites in the United States using Shigella flexneri 2a strain 2457T and Shigella sonnei strain 53G. Shigellosis can present variably as watery diarrhea alone or with dysentery, and can be accompanied by manifestations including fever, abdominal cramps, tenesmus, and malaise. For comparability, it is important to harmonize the primary clinical endpoint. An expert working group was convened on 2 February 2018 to review clinical data from Shigella CHIM studies performed to date and to develop a consensus primary endpoint. The consensus endpoint enabled "shigellosis" to present as severe diarrhea or moderate diarrhea or dysentery. The latter 2 criteria are met when concurrent with fever of 38.0°C and/or vomiting, and/or a constitutional/enteric symptom graded at least as "moderate" severity. The use of a blinded independent committee to adjudicate the primary endpoint by subject was also regarded as important. As safety of volunteers in challenge studies is of paramount importance and treatment timing can affect primary outcomes, a standard for early antibiotic administration was established as follows: (1) when the primary endpoint is met; (2) if a fever of ≥39.0°C develops; or (3) if the study physician deems it appropriate. Otherwise, antibiotics are given at 120 hours postinfectious challenge. The working group agreed on objective and subjective symptoms to be solicited, and standardized methods for assessing subject-reported severity of symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Shigellazzm321990 ; controlled human infection model; endpoints; human infection studies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31816065 PMCID: PMC6901125 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciz891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Primary Endpoint for Shigellosis in Shigella Controlled Human Infection Model
| Primary Endpoint (Shigellosis) | Definition |
|---|---|
| 1. Severe diarrhea | ≥6 loose stoolsa in 24 h OR >800 g loose stools in 24 h |
| 2. Moderate diarrhea | [4–5 loose stools in 24 h OR 400–800 g loose stools in 24 h] AND [oral temperature ≥38.0°Cb OR ≥1 moderate constitutional/ enteric symptomc OR ≥2 episodes of vomiting in 24 h] |
| 3. Dysentery | ≥2 loose stools with gross blood (hemoccult positive) in 24 h AND [oral temperature ≥38.0°C OR ≥1 moderate constitutional/ enteric symptom OR ≥2 episodes of vomiting in 24 h] |
Participant must fulfill any 1 of the 3 possible endpoint scenarios to qualify as having reached the primary endpoint of shigellosis.
aGrade 3 to 5.
bConfirmed by 2 separate readings at least 5 minutes apart.
cSee Table 2.
Constitutional/Enteric Symptoms That Qualify a Primary Endpoint of Moderate Diarrhea and Dysentery as Fulfilling the Definition of Shigellosis in Shigella Controlled Human Infection Model
| Constitutional/Enteric Symptom |
|---|
| Nausea |
| Abdominal pain/cramping |
| Myalgia/arthralgia |
| Malaise |
Symptom must be “moderate” in character, causing interference with routine activities (where “severe” symptoms are an inability to perform routine daily activities). Not included: anorexia, rigors/chills, tenesmus/fecal urgency, gas/flatulence, headache.
Criteria for Early Treatment With Antibiotics in Shigella Controlled Human Infection Model
| Criteria for Early Treatment |
|---|
| 1. Meets primary endpoint definition of shigellosis |
| 2. Temperature ≥39.0°C |
| 3. Any other reason warranting early treatment in the physician's opinion |
Treatment instigated as soon as any 1 criterion is fulfilled; otherwise, treat with antibiotics at 120 hours following ingestion of Shigella challenge dose.