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Clinical Research: Constipation Sections
Author Biography
Introduction
What is constipation?
Understanding the problem
Objective Measurement
Subjective Measurement
Measuring Components
Precipitating Factors
Currently Selected Section: Therapeutic Comparisons
Research Questions
Conclusion




Chapter 3: Methods for Clinical Research in Constipation: Therapeutic Comparisons
          

What flexibility of dose is permitted?

What form of rescue medication is allowed, and when?

These are linked questions. Clearly there has to be control over both of these factors or it will be impossible to tell what has worked for the patient. A commonly held view is that in a therapeutic setting it is unreasonable to permit more than three days without a bowel movement. Hence at this point an alternative laxative, oral or rectal (perhaps better in terms of likely speed of effect and of lack of carry-over effects), can be offered. The likelihood of needing this intervention might be an outcome for a particular dose of the test laxative, or it might be taken as a prompt to increase the dose of the test agent to a pre-specified higher level after which the sequence begins again.

Eligibility, endpoints, and practical considerations

There are problems in defining eligibility criteria and endpoints for studies in constipation. For studies performed in a palliative care population there are the added difficulties of a frail and increasingly ill population whose unstable clinical state introduces confounding variables and leads to significant attrition of subject numbers.

An adequate trial must also take account not only of the adverse effects of the therapeutic interventions but also their acceptability to patients and their costs, which vary considerably between different preparations. For outpatients, the cost of admissions for constipation secondary to laxative failure is also an appropriate outcome variable. Enemas and suppositories often involve staff in their administration, and so here it is also appropriate to consider cost in terms of the time taken to introduce them.

Even in chronic constipation the number and quality of oral laxative trials is limited, and they are difficult to compare as there is no standardization of approach, either in design or in outcome measures.

  • Design - It is impossible to apply the same design to all treatment settings. Consider the differences inherent in studying constipation in:
  • Home versus in-patient
  • Nursing/medical visits versus telephone monitoring
  • Healthy patients versus medically-ill patients
  • Pediatric versus young adult versus elderly adult, and
  • Mentally clear versus mentally impaired, and so on.
  • Outcome measures - There remains a problem because there are no particular endpoints, outcome measures, or scales that have gained widespread acceptance.
  • Meta-analyses of chronic constipation trials

    Many trials of rectal laxatives concentrate on their value for bowel preparation prior to surgical or investigational procedures. Two systematic reviews of oral laxatives in chronic constipation have been published.

    Table 8.2 Meta-analysis of oral laxatives for chronic constipation
    Click each hyperlink for details

    • Identified 113 reports of which only 36 were of randomized controlled trials considered suitable for analysis. Of the 36 trials:
    • 20 compared a single active agent (laxative or fiber) to placebo, regular diet (or in one case yogurt) or discontinued therapy.
    • 16 compared active therapies: three were clearly double-blinded, while the rest were certainly or probably open.
    • 20 studies permitted additional laxatives or enemas if patients or clinicians deemed them appropriate, and assessed their use as an outcome measure.
    • Some 23 trials were under one month duration.
    • Dropout rates ranged from 0 to 60% with 17 trials losing more than 20% of entrants.
    • Took studies identified in Tramonte's work and also examined additional databases in order to concentrate on the effectiveness of laxatives in people over age 55 years. Twenty trials were identified:
    • One half (10) compared two active therapies
    • The other half (10) compared one therapy against placebo.
    • Authors confirmed that the quality of many laxative trials is mediocre.
    • Authors concluded that while laxatives as a class improve bowel function and symptoms of constipation, there is little evidence of any preparation being markedly more effective than any other.

     

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