A Study to Evaluate the Effect of Fecal Transplant and Dietary Changes on Disease Activity in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Active Crohn Disease

Last updated: April 1, 2025
Sponsor: All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

N/A

Treatment

Fecal Microbial Transplantation

Crohns disease exclusion diet

Sham diet

Clinical Study ID

NCT06890650
AIIMSA2989/03.01.2025
EMDR/CARE/12/2023-0000572
  • Ages 18-75
  • All Genders

Study Summary

Dysbiosis can be rectified by several methods: antibiotics, prebiotics, probiotics, dietary modulation, and fecal microbiota transplantation. There has been limited success with the isolated use of antibiotics and pre/probiotics in the treatment of IBD. Among the measures of dietary manipulation, the use of exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) has shown superior, or at least equivalent, efficacy compared with steroids in pediatric CD. Although the results in adults are not as encouraging, recent cohort studies in patients with complicated CD have shown good success rates. Definite exclusion diets that exclude pro-inflammatory dietary constituents have also been tested with good clinical efficacy in patients with CD, who even failed treatment with anti-TNF agents. Various dietary approaches, inclusive of exclusive enteral nutrition, partial enteral nutrition, and Crohn's disease exclusion diet have been reported to be of benefit and are associated with changes in gut microbiome. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) defined as the infusion of fecal suspension from a healthy individual into the gastrointestinal tract of an individual with GI disease carries a diverse population of microbiota and their metabolites and has been tested with varying efficacy in IBD. In general, FMT has shown good success rates in randomized control trials in patients with UC who failed conventional agents. Although limited small RCTs exist in CD, cohort studies have also shown good success rates. Therefore, the use of FMT in addition to standard medical therapy, is a concept that has not been previously explored and forms the basis for the present study. Therefore, a well-powered RCT is required to resolve the role of FMT in CD. In this study, patients will be recruited in four arms. Group A includes FMT+CDED+SMT, in Group B FMT+SMT+SHAM DIET, in Group C Sham FMT+CDED+SMT, in Group D Sham FMT+ Sham Diet+ SMT given. 168 patients will be recruited across 6 centers for around 3 years. Follow-up of the patient will be done at 0,2,6 and 10 weeks and 8 weekly up to 48 weeks.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Patients with treatment-naive Crohns disease accessible with ileocolonoscopy

  2. Symptom onset of less than 12 months

  3. Mild to moderate disease activity with endoscopically active disease

  4. CDAI of greater than 150 and less than 450

  5. SES-CD of or equal to or greater than 6 (or equal to or greater than 4 ifisolated ileal disease)

  6. Aged between 18-75 years

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Patients with severe disease (CDAI greater than 450, SES-CD greater than 16) orrequiring hospitalization

  2. Patients who have been received on corticosteroids, immunosuppressants (azathioprine/ 6- mercaptoprine/methotrexate) for greater than 2 weeks

  3. Biologicals or small molecule exposure

  4. Stricturing (non-passable stricture), fistulising phenotype or perianalfistula/abscess

  5. L4 disease

  6. Pregnant or lactating women

  7. Previous surgery for CD

  8. Declining consent

  9. Not willing for FMT/Dietary advise

  10. Patients with current or recent history of clinically severe, progressive, oruncontrolled renal, hepatic, hematological, gastrointestinal, metabolic, endocrine,pulmonary, cardiac, or neurological disease.

  11. Positive assay or stool culture for pathogens (ova and parasite examination,bacteria) or positive test for Clostridioides difficile toxin at screening#

  12. Patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) # The patients withpositive assay will be treated appropriately and tests will be repeated. Those withnegative assay and persistent activity will be included in the study.

Study Design

Total Participants: 168
Treatment Group(s): 4
Primary Treatment: Fecal Microbial Transplantation
Phase:
Study Start date:
March 15, 2025
Estimated Completion Date:
March 15, 2028

Study Description

This study is a multi-center, double-blind, factorial randomized controlled trial designed to evaluate the efficacy of microbiome manipulation strategies using fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet (CDED), or their combination in treatment-naïve patients with mild to moderate active Crohn's Disease (CD).

Study Setting

The trial is conducted at six FMT centers across India, with one additional center dedicated to microbiome analysis:

AIIMS, New Delhi, India Dayanand Medical College, Ludhiana, India PGIMER, Chandigarh, India Lisie Hospital, Kochi, India IMS, BHU, Varanasi, India Sion Hospital, Mumbai, India IIIT-Delhi, India(for microbiome analysis)

Intervention Details:

Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT)- Patients receive a 3-day course of oral vancomycin (500 mg BD) before the first FMT.

Freshly prepared 50 g stool is used for each FMT, and the transplant is administered within 4 hours of preparation.

FMT is delivered via colonoscopy at weeks 0, 2, and 6, followed by 8-weekly maintenance sessions for responders at weeks 10, 18, 26, 34, 42.

Multiple donors (n≥2) are used to ensure microbiome diversity. The first FMT session is instilled in the right colon/terminal ileum post bowel preparation, whereas maintenance sessions involve left-colon infusion without bowel preparation.

Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet (CDED)- Patients assigned to CDED follow a phased dietary protocol designed to limit exposure to pro-inflammatory dietary components and enhance gut microbiome stability.

CDED consists of an induction and maintenance phase, with structured dietary charts and counseling provided by a dietitian.

Compliance is monitored via telephonic interviews and a dedicated diet tracking app (IBD NutriCare).

Sham Interventions- Sham FMT: Patients receive sterile water or saline infusions via colonoscopy at the same time points as FMT.

Sham Diet: Patients receive general dietary advice but do not follow the CDED protocol.

Randomization and Blinding- Central randomization is conducted using a secure web-based system (REDCap), utilizing stratified randomization based on disease extent.

The study follows a double-blind approach:

Blinded: Patients, clinical assessors, and endoscopic scorers. Unblinded: Endoscopists administering FMT/sham FMT and dietitians providing dietary counseling.

Oral vancomycin and placebo capsules are identically packed to maintain blinding.

Data Collection and Assessments- Baseline Assessments (Week 0) Clinical Assessment: Crohn's Disease Activity Index (CDAI), symptom scoring, and dietary adherence evaluation.

Laboratory Tests: Hemogram, renal/liver function, CRP, ESR, fecal calprotectin, and microbiome profiling.

Endoscopy: SES-CD scoring with high-definition endoscopic video recording. Histology: Biopsy samples are analyzed using Distribution Chronicity and Activity (DCA) scoring.

Follow-up Assessments- Clinical assessments at weeks 0, 2, 4, 6, 10, and every 8 weeks thereafter. Endoscopic assessments at baseline, week 10, and week 48, with central reading of all videos.

Fecal microbiome analysis at baseline, week 10, and week 48. Safety and Monitoring- Adverse Events (AEs) graded per CTCAE criteria (Grades 1-5). Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) include hospitalization, life-threatening conditions, or death.

DSMB reviews interim safety data at week 10 and 24. Emergency unblinding is permitted for critical medical decisions. Data Management- Data is collected using REDCap, with role-based access controls. Endoscopic images and videos are securely stored for centralized analysis. Microbiome sequencing data is processed at IIIT-Delhi. Statistical Considerations- Sample size calculation: 168 patients (42 per arm, 90% power).

Analysis Plan:

Intention-to-treat (ITT) and per-protocol (PP) analyses. Longitudinal mixed-effects modeling for microbiome shift

Connect with a study center

  • Department of Gastroenterology and Human Nutrition, All India Institute of Medical Sciences

    New Delhi, Delhi
    India

    Active - Recruiting

  • Department of Gastroenterology, Lisie Hospital

    Kochi, Kerala
    India

    Site Not Available

  • Lokmanya Tilak Municipal General Hospital and Lokmanya Tilak Municipal Medical College, Sion

    Mumbai, Maharastra
    India

    Site Not Available

  • Department of Gastroenterology, Dayanand Medical College

    Ludhiana, Punjab
    India

    Site Not Available

  • Department of Gastroentrology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

    Chandigarh, Punjab/Haryana
    India

    Site Not Available

  • Department of Gastroenterology, Institute of Medical Sciences, Banaras Hindu University

    Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh
    India

    Site Not Available

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