Inulin for Infections in the Intensive Care Unit



Status:Not yet recruiting
Conditions:Food Studies, Infectious Disease, Infectious Disease, Hospital, Hospital
Therapuetic Areas:Immunology / Infectious Diseases, Pharmacology / Toxicology, Other
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - Any
Updated:3/22/2019
Start Date:October 1, 2019
End Date:October 1, 2024
Contact:Daniel E Freedberg, MD, MS
Email:def2004@cumc.columbia.edu
Phone:8579989370

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Prebiotic Inulin to Limit Antimicrobial-Resistant Infections During Critical Illness: A Phase II Clinical Trial

Normal gut bacteria prevent colonization and subsequent infection with MDR organisms (MDROs)
through competition for resources and other mechanisms. During critical illness, this
function of the microbiome is lost and there are no current treatments to restore it.
Preliminary data indicates that the prebiotic fiber inulin is safe and may alter the
gastrointestinal microbiome to improve gut barrier function, decrease colonization with
MDROs, and reduce downstream risk for intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired MDR infections.
However, the impact of inulin during critical illness is unknown. This double-blind,
randomized clinical trial will test inulin for the prevention of antibiotic resistant
infections in the ICU.

The trial's specific aims are to determine (1) the feasibility, tolerability, and safety of
inulin in the intensive care unit; (2) the impact of inulin on gut colonization with
antibiotic-resistant pathogens; and (2A/exploratory) the impact of inulin on ICU-acquired
antibiotic-resistant infections.

The proposed trial hypothesizes that inulin maintains short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing
colonic anaerobes and that these bacteria are protective against multi-drug resistant
organism (MDRO) colonization and subsequent MDR infection. Inulin, a vegetable-derived
non-digestible polysaccharide is well established as the key nutrient source for
SCFA-producing bacteria. Previous human studies have shown that (1) inulin increases levels
of SCFA producers and SCFAs and (2) that this increase correlates with improved colonic
mucosal integrity and resistance to MDR pathogens. In animal studies, inulin improves
survival after pathogen challenge or injection with lipopolysaccharide. The overall aim of
this clinical trial is to determine whether inulin improves gut colonization resistance
against antibiotic-resistant pathogens and therefore prevents antibiotic-resistant infections
in the setting of critical illness. To accomplish this, 90 critically ill adults who are
receiving broad-spectrum antibiotics will be blindly randomized 1:1:1 to receive placebo,
inulin 8 g twice daily, or inulin 16 g twice daily for a minimum of 7 days, with bedside
follow-up extending to 30 days or hospital discharge.

Inclusion Criteria:

1. Hospitalized in an eligible medical ICU

2. Age ≥ 18 years old at the time of hospitalization

3. With sepsis as defined by the Sepsis-3 (2016) consensus as a known or suspected
infection with a SOFA score of ≥2 points above baseline

4. Received broad-spectrum antibiotics within the last 24 hours or ordered and pending
administration

5. Able to complete enrollment within 4 hours of ICU admission for administration of the
intervention within 6 hours of ICU admission

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Inability to receive oral or enteric fluids

2. Inulin allergy

3. Hyponatremia (serum sodium ≤128 mEq/L)

4. Immunosuppression, defined as history of solid organ transplant or as receipt of
ablative chemotherapy, steroids at the equivalent of ≥5 mg/day prednisone,
antimetabolites, anti-TNFα agents, calcineurin inhibitors, or mycophenolate

5. Surgery involving the intestinal lumen within 30 days or known intestinal strictures

6. Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) or Do Not Intubate (DNI) status, or "no escalation of care"
orders

7. Lack capacity for consent and no appropriate Legally Authorized Representative (LAR)
We found this trial at
1
site
630 W 168th St
New York, New York
212-305-2862
Principal Investigator: Daniel E Freedberg, MD, MS
Columbia University Medical Center Situated on a 20-acre campus in Northern Manhattan and accounting for...
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mi
from
New York, NY
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