Abstract
Enterocutaneous fistula (ECF) is a complication of surgery or inflammatory bowel disease associated with disproportionately high healthcare costs, morbidity, and mortality. We performed this proof-of-concept, feasibility, open-label, pilot randomized, crossover study to assess the efficacy and safety of the use of teduglutide (TED) to treat ECF. Adults (age >18) with low-output (<200mL/d) ECF were randomized to 2 months of continuing standard-of-care (SOC) followed by crossover to 2 months of SOC+TED or the reverse order. The primary efficacy endpoint was decrease in fistula volume by 20% of baseline 3-day average. Secondary efficacy endpoints were: fistula resolution and health-related quality of life questionnaire scores. Six out of 10 planned subjects were randomized and completed the study, which was terminated early due to slow enrollment during the Covid-19 pandemic. Overall subject compliance with daily TED injections was high (98%). Five of six enrolled subjects met the definition for the primary efficacy endpoint; these clinical responses were not observed during the SOC arm in these subjects. One subject experienced complete fistula closure during TED treatment. Adverse events during treatment were uncommon, minor, and usually resolved despite ongoing treatment. Quality of life survey responses were highly variable and did not correlate with fistula changes. Two months of teduglutide treatment was feasible, well-tolerated, and resulted in observable decreases in ECF drainage in the majority of subjects, including spontaneous closure in one subject. This therapy shows promise, but larger, multicenter confirmatory trials are required. GOV: (NCT02889393).
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