Cargando…

Management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (MIBS trial)

BACKGROUND: IBS affects 10-22% of the UK population. Abdominal pain, bloating and altered bowel habit affect quality of life, social functioning and time off work. Current GP treatment relies on a positive diagnosis, reassurance, lifestyle advice and drug therapies, but many suffer ongoing symptoms....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Everitt, Hazel A, Moss-Morris, Rona E, Sibelli, Alice, Tapp, Laura, Coleman, Nicholas S, Yardley, Lucy, Smith, Peter W, Little, Paul S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2998449/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21087463
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-10-136
_version_ 1782193360061071360
author Everitt, Hazel A
Moss-Morris, Rona E
Sibelli, Alice
Tapp, Laura
Coleman, Nicholas S
Yardley, Lucy
Smith, Peter W
Little, Paul S
author_facet Everitt, Hazel A
Moss-Morris, Rona E
Sibelli, Alice
Tapp, Laura
Coleman, Nicholas S
Yardley, Lucy
Smith, Peter W
Little, Paul S
author_sort Everitt, Hazel A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: IBS affects 10-22% of the UK population. Abdominal pain, bloating and altered bowel habit affect quality of life, social functioning and time off work. Current GP treatment relies on a positive diagnosis, reassurance, lifestyle advice and drug therapies, but many suffer ongoing symptoms. A recent Cochrane review highlighted the lack of research evidence for IBS drugs. Neither GPs, nor patients have good evidence to inform prescribing decisions. However, IBS drugs are widely used: In 2005 the NHS costs were nearly £10 million for mebeverine and over £8 million for fibre-based bulking agents. CBT and self-management can be helpful, but poor availability in the NHS restricts their use. We have developed a web-based CBT self-management programme, Regul8, based on an existing evidence based self-management manual and in partnership with patients. This could increase access with minimal increased costs. METHODS/DESIGN: The aim is to undertake a feasibility factorial RCT to assess the effectiveness of the commonly prescribed medications in UK general practice for IBS: mebeverine (anti-spasmodic) and methylcellulose (bulking-agent) and Regul8, the CBT based self-management website. 135 patients aged 16 to 60 years with IBS symptoms fulfilling Rome III criteria, recruited via GP practices, will be randomised to 1 of 3 levels of the drug condition: mebeverine, methylcellulose or placebo for 6 weeks and to 1 of 3 levels of the website condition, Regul8 with a nurse telephone session and email support, Regul8 with minimal email support, or no website, thus creating 9 groups. Outcomes: Irritable bowel symptom severity scale and IBS-QOL will be measured at baseline, 6 and 12 weeks as the primary outcomes. An intention to treat analysis will be undertaken by ANCOVA for a factorial trial. DISCUSSION: This pilot will provide valuable information for a larger trial. Determining the effectiveness of commonly used drug treatments will help patients and doctors make informed treatment decisions regarding drug management of IBS symptoms, enabling better targeting of treatment. A web-based self-management CBT programme for IBS developed in partnership with patients has the potential to benefit large numbers of patients with low cost to the NHS. Assessment of the amount of email or therapist support required for the website will enable economic analysis to be undertaken. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier (NCT number): NCT00934973.
format Text
id pubmed-2998449
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-29984492010-12-08 Management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (MIBS trial) Everitt, Hazel A Moss-Morris, Rona E Sibelli, Alice Tapp, Laura Coleman, Nicholas S Yardley, Lucy Smith, Peter W Little, Paul S BMC Gastroenterol Study Protocol BACKGROUND: IBS affects 10-22% of the UK population. Abdominal pain, bloating and altered bowel habit affect quality of life, social functioning and time off work. Current GP treatment relies on a positive diagnosis, reassurance, lifestyle advice and drug therapies, but many suffer ongoing symptoms. A recent Cochrane review highlighted the lack of research evidence for IBS drugs. Neither GPs, nor patients have good evidence to inform prescribing decisions. However, IBS drugs are widely used: In 2005 the NHS costs were nearly £10 million for mebeverine and over £8 million for fibre-based bulking agents. CBT and self-management can be helpful, but poor availability in the NHS restricts their use. We have developed a web-based CBT self-management programme, Regul8, based on an existing evidence based self-management manual and in partnership with patients. This could increase access with minimal increased costs. METHODS/DESIGN: The aim is to undertake a feasibility factorial RCT to assess the effectiveness of the commonly prescribed medications in UK general practice for IBS: mebeverine (anti-spasmodic) and methylcellulose (bulking-agent) and Regul8, the CBT based self-management website. 135 patients aged 16 to 60 years with IBS symptoms fulfilling Rome III criteria, recruited via GP practices, will be randomised to 1 of 3 levels of the drug condition: mebeverine, methylcellulose or placebo for 6 weeks and to 1 of 3 levels of the website condition, Regul8 with a nurse telephone session and email support, Regul8 with minimal email support, or no website, thus creating 9 groups. Outcomes: Irritable bowel symptom severity scale and IBS-QOL will be measured at baseline, 6 and 12 weeks as the primary outcomes. An intention to treat analysis will be undertaken by ANCOVA for a factorial trial. DISCUSSION: This pilot will provide valuable information for a larger trial. Determining the effectiveness of commonly used drug treatments will help patients and doctors make informed treatment decisions regarding drug management of IBS symptoms, enabling better targeting of treatment. A web-based self-management CBT programme for IBS developed in partnership with patients has the potential to benefit large numbers of patients with low cost to the NHS. Assessment of the amount of email or therapist support required for the website will enable economic analysis to be undertaken. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier (NCT number): NCT00934973. BioMed Central 2010-11-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2998449/ /pubmed/21087463 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-10-136 Text en Copyright ©2010 Everitt et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Everitt, Hazel A
Moss-Morris, Rona E
Sibelli, Alice
Tapp, Laura
Coleman, Nicholas S
Yardley, Lucy
Smith, Peter W
Little, Paul S
Management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (MIBS trial)
title Management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (MIBS trial)
title_full Management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (MIBS trial)
title_fullStr Management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (MIBS trial)
title_full_unstemmed Management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (MIBS trial)
title_short Management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (MIBS trial)
title_sort management of irritable bowel syndrome in primary care: feasibility randomised controlled trial of mebeverine, methylcellulose, placebo and a patient self-management cognitive behavioural therapy website. (mibs trial)
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2998449/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21087463
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-10-136
work_keys_str_mv AT everitthazela managementofirritablebowelsyndromeinprimarycarefeasibilityrandomisedcontrolledtrialofmebeverinemethylcelluloseplaceboandapatientselfmanagementcognitivebehaviouraltherapywebsitemibstrial
AT mossmorrisronae managementofirritablebowelsyndromeinprimarycarefeasibilityrandomisedcontrolledtrialofmebeverinemethylcelluloseplaceboandapatientselfmanagementcognitivebehaviouraltherapywebsitemibstrial
AT sibellialice managementofirritablebowelsyndromeinprimarycarefeasibilityrandomisedcontrolledtrialofmebeverinemethylcelluloseplaceboandapatientselfmanagementcognitivebehaviouraltherapywebsitemibstrial
AT tapplaura managementofirritablebowelsyndromeinprimarycarefeasibilityrandomisedcontrolledtrialofmebeverinemethylcelluloseplaceboandapatientselfmanagementcognitivebehaviouraltherapywebsitemibstrial
AT colemannicholass managementofirritablebowelsyndromeinprimarycarefeasibilityrandomisedcontrolledtrialofmebeverinemethylcelluloseplaceboandapatientselfmanagementcognitivebehaviouraltherapywebsitemibstrial
AT yardleylucy managementofirritablebowelsyndromeinprimarycarefeasibilityrandomisedcontrolledtrialofmebeverinemethylcelluloseplaceboandapatientselfmanagementcognitivebehaviouraltherapywebsitemibstrial
AT smithpeterw managementofirritablebowelsyndromeinprimarycarefeasibilityrandomisedcontrolledtrialofmebeverinemethylcelluloseplaceboandapatientselfmanagementcognitivebehaviouraltherapywebsitemibstrial
AT littlepauls managementofirritablebowelsyndromeinprimarycarefeasibilityrandomisedcontrolledtrialofmebeverinemethylcelluloseplaceboandapatientselfmanagementcognitivebehaviouraltherapywebsitemibstrial