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Traditional Chinese medicine (Shun-Qi-Tong-Xie Granule) for irritable bowel syndrome: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

Abstract

Background

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal functional disorder with no effective therapy. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is one of the most common complementary therapies in China. We designed this study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Shun-Qi-Tong-Xie Granule (SQTX Granule), a TCM treatment, in patients with IBS with diarrhea (IBS-D).

Methods/Design

A randomised, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, multi-centre, superiority clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of SQTX Granule is proposed. Eligible patients (Rome III) with IBD-S will be randomly assigned into SQTX Granule group and the placebo group. Patients will receive a 28-day treatment and a 2-month follow-up. The primary outcome measures include the scores of IBS-quality of life (IBS-QOL) rating scale and IBS-symptom severity scale (IBS-SSS) rating scale. The secondary outcome measures include the improvement of symptom scores, and the duration of abdominal pain and diarrhea.

Discussion

According to TCM theory, SQTX Granule has a regulating effect on abdominal pain, diarrhea and the syndrome of liver-spleen disharmony, which is similar to the symptoms of IBS-D. This study will provide objective evidence to evaluate the efficiency and safety of SQTX Granule in IBS-D treatment.

Trial registration

ChiCTR-TRC-14004241.

Date of registration: 9 February 2014.

Peer Review reports

Background

IBS refers to a clinical syndrome that presents as a common chronic gastrointestinal disorder. Patients suffer from abdominal pain or discomfort, bloating, and altered bowel habit, which vary in both degree and frequency, from slight to severe and from recurrent to persistent, respectively[1]. The disease is one of the most common functional gastrointestinal (GI) disorders with a reported prevalence of approximately 5 to 20% worldwide[1–3]. IBS is more commonly diagnosed in women than in men, and in patients younger than 50 years[1, 4, 5]. IBS considerably reduces patients’ quality of life, interfering with their working ability and social activity, and it also results in a significant economic burden through decreased work productivity and increased healthcare costs[6]. With the accelerated pace of life and changes in diet in recent years, neurological, psychiatric and infectious factors have caused an upward trend in the incidence of IBS[7–9]. No biomarkers have been found for IBS diagnosis[10], so IBS is diagnosed by assessing symptoms, according to the Rome III criteria[11, 12]. According to these criteria, four subtypes of IBS were recognised: IBS with constipation (IBS-C), IBS-D, mixed IBS (IBS-M), and unsubtyped IBS (IBS-U). Each IBS patient could switch from one subgroup to another over time. Current medication approaches for IBS are based on symptom reduction, yet many patients remain undertreated; meanwhile, many medication approaches are associated with side effects that result in less benefit to the patient, particularly in treatment for long-term relief of abdominal pain or discomfort.

Due to unsatisfactory treatment effectiveness, the search for and use of complementary and alternative medicines (CAM) has increased during the past several years around the world[13–15]. Studies indicate an improvement both in the abdominal complaints and the quality of life in IBS patients adopting CAM treatment, which includes dietary supplements, TCM, acupuncture, moxibustion and botanicals[13–16]. TCM is one of the most common CAMs used in China, and it has an over 5,000-year history of applications for various diseases, including IBS-D[17]. According to TCM theory, one of the most important principles of diagnosis and treatment is symptom differentiation, which is based on four diagnostic methods (inspection, listening and smelling, inquiry and palpation) to collect clinical manifestations, including symptoms and TCM signs.

In IBS-D, the most common symptom type is liver-spleen disharmony, and it is primarily characterised by abdominal pain/discomfort, diarrhea, chest/flank/abdominal distension, belching, frequent sighing and emotion-related symptoms. According to the basic principles of TCM, IBS-D with liver-spleen disharmony is treated by relieving stagnation of liver qi, as well as improving the transportation function of the spleen. First recorded in the TCM classic ‘Jingyue's Complete Works’, Tong-Xie-Yao-Fang (TXYF) decoction has been applied since the Ming Dynasty (16th century) to cure abdominal pain with diarrhea (liver-spleen disharmony). Modified from TXYF decoction, Shun-Qi-Tong-Xie (SQTX) Granule treats abdominal pain, distention and diarrhea in patients suffering from IBS-D (liver-spleen disharmony), and it is formulated with the Chinese herbs listed in Table 1, which have all been approved by the China Food and Drug Administration (CFDA)[18]. In preclinical trials and toxicological studies, no evidence of toxic effects has been found with SQTX Granule. Pharmacologic experiments showed that it has the effects of inducing spasmolysis, analgesia and reducing diarrhea in rats with diarrhea caused by stress. Phase II clinical trials also showed that SQTX Granule can improve symptoms of abdominal pain/discomfort and the degree and frequency of diarrhea for patients with IBS-D (liver-spleen disharmony).

Table 1 Standard formulation of Shun-Qi-Tong-Xie (SQTX) Granule

Chinese herbs have been used for a long time with good effects and few adverse events; however, a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial is still necessary to prove the efficacy and safety of any medication. As a phase III clinical trial, the objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of SQTX Granule with a placebo in patients with IBS-D (liver-spleen disharmony). The results of this study will provide evidence regarding the value of SQTX Granule as an intervention for IBS-D.

Methods/design

Design

This study is designed as a randomised, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, multi-centre, superiority clinical trial. This study is a phase III clinical trial and has been authorised by the CFDA (Approval Number 2007 L02218). In addition, the study is registered with the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR-TRC-14004241). The study is financially supported by Shaanxi Bosen Biological Pharmaceutical Group Co. Ltd, Xi’an, China. This funding source is providing test drugs, but it had no role in the design of this study and does not have any responsibility for analyses, interpretation of the data or the decision to submit results. Trained research nurses introduce the trial to patients, and give them information sheets and consent forms. All patients have to give their written informed consent prior to enrolment. The study’s flow chart is shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1
figure 1

Study flow chart. The flow chart of enrolment, allocation, intervention and assessment.

Ethics

The trial protocol is conducted in accordance with the Good Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Declaration of Helsinki (2008)[19]. Ethics approval has been obtained from the Clinical Trials and Biomedical Ethics Committee of West China Hospital of Sichuan University (Number TCM-2013-01). Written informed consent will be obtained from each patient.

Recruitment

A total of 440 Chinese patients who fulfill the screening criteria will be recruited at eight large comprehensive hospitals in China: 1) West China Hospital of Sichuan University, 2) Affiliated Hospital of Chengdu University of TCM, 3) The First Affiliated Hospital of Heilongjiang University Of Chinese Medicine, 4) Affiliated Hospital of Jiangxi University of TCM, 5) Shanxi Provincial Hospital of TCM, 6) The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, 7) Gansu Provincial Hospital of TCM and 8) Affiliated Hospital of Changchun University of Chinese Medicine. Each centre will recruit 55 patients through posters in local hospitals.

Sample size calculation

According to the results of Phase II clinical trial, the response rates of SQTX Granule and placebo were 0.51 and 0.33, respectively. Assuming the response rates for TCM and placebo were 0.5 and 0.35, the sample size was calculated under the setting of alpha = 0.05 and beta = 0.80. Taking into account a drop-out of 15%, the sample size needs to be 150 cases for each group. A total of 440 patients will be recruited in this trial, including 330 cases for the SQTX Granule group and 110 cases for the placebo group in a 3:1 ratio.

Randomisation

With a stratified block randomisation method, a 440-case randomisation arrangement was carried out by an independent statistician according to the sequence generated with SAS software; this lists a serial number from 001 to 440 corresponding to consecutive allocation (with a randomisation scheme). Each centre receives consecutively coded drugs. All of the drugs provided by the pharmaceutical company will be numbered with a label according to the randomisation schedule.

Blinding

This trial is a double-blind trial. The first level is for the case number corresponding to groups (group A, group B), and the second level is for the group corresponding to intervention (the test and placebo groups). The numbers are kept in opaque sealed envelopes. The double levels of blinding are sealed separately, and given to the leader and the sponsor of the clinical research. Emergency letters are sent to each of the centres, saved with the test drug, and properly preserved until the end of the trial. Treatment assignments will not be revealed and are blinded to the patients and investigators (including statisticians) until the entire study is completed. Code-breaking should only occur with the permission of the research centre leader in exceptional circumstances when serious adverse events happen and knowledge of the actual treatment is absolutely essential for further management of the patient, and a report should be submitted to the leader of the trial within 24 hours. For the first level of unblinding, before statistical analysis, the blind code will be disclosed to group A and group B. For the second level of unblinding, group A and group B will be disclosed to the test placebo groups in a summary meeting.

Western medicine diagnostic criteria for IBS-D

Diagnosis of IBS-D is established according to the Rome III criteria[11, 12], mode listed in Table 2.

Table 2 Mode of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)

Diagnostic criteria*:

Recurrent abdominal pain or discomfort** at least three days/month in the last three months associated with two or more of the following:

  1. 1.

    Improvement with defecation

  2. 2.

    Onset associated with a change in frequency of stool

  3. 3.

    Onset associated with a change in form (appearance) of stool

*Criteria fulfilled for the last three months with symptom onset at least three months prior to diagnosis

**‘Discomfort’ means an uncomfortable sensation not described as pain.

In pathophysiology research and clinical trials, a pain/discomfort frequency of at least two days a week during the screening evaluation is recommended for subject eligibility.

Diagnostic criteria for TCM syndrome differentiation

The TCM diagnosis of liver-spleen disharmony and diarrhea syndrome is based on the Guidelines for Clinical Research of New Chinese Medicine[20].

For diagnosis with liver-spleen disharmony and diarrhea syndrome, patients will have both of the primary and at least two of the secondary symptoms listed in Table 3, as well as the TCM signs for the tongue and pulse.

Table 3 Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) diagnostic criteria

Inclusion criteria

  •  Diagnosis of IBS-D according to Western medicine

  •  Diagnosis of liver-spleen disharmony and diarrhea syndrome according to TCM

  •  Aged between 18 and 65 years old

  •  Able to understand and sign a written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  •  Diagnosis of IBS-C, IBS-M or IBS-U according to Western medicine

  •  A history of previous abdominal surgery

  •  Other organic diseases causing abdominal pain and diarrhea

  •  History of usage of other medication for IBS-D during the last week

  •  Patients taking any medication for other diseases which would impact the trial

  •  Pregnant and lactating women

  •  Patients who have an allergic constitution or are allergic to the trial medicine

  •  Patients with serious primary diseases of the heart, liver, kidney, blood system or endocrine system, and patients with tumours or AIDS

  • Mentally or legally disabled patients

Other criteria

Withdrawal of participants:

  •  Patients are determined as requiring withdrawal based on disease progression, allergic reactions, serious adverse events, or poor efficacy

  •  Serious complications

  •  Unblinding individuals for any reasons

  •  Voluntarily quitting

  •  Unable to complete the scheduled follow-up

Reasons for withdrawing patients would be noted in Case Report Forms (CRFs), and the last data would be included in data analysis.

Note: 1) Patients cured in a course of treatment are not regarded as cases for withdrawal.

  1. 2)

    Patients withdrawn due to poor efficacy after a half course of treatment (14 days) are regarded as not recovered but not withdrawn, and they would be included in the Full Analysis Set (FAS) and the Per Protocol Set (PPS).

Dropout of participants

  •  Misdiagnosis

  •  Using forbidden drugs or treatments in the course of the trial

  •  Taking no medication during the trial

  •  No evaluable records after medication

The whole study will be terminated if any of the following occurs

  •  Poor curative effect is found during the study

  •  Significant deviation from the protocol

  •  Flawed protocol

  •  The sponsors decide to terminate the trial due to management or funding problems

  •  At the decision of the pharmaceutical supervisory and administrative department

Concomitant treatments and forbidden drugs

Usage of any other Western medication or Chinese medicines that have similar effects to SQTX Granule, or may affect the analysis of the final results, is strictly prohibited. Medications used to control other conditions of the participants, such as hypertensive or diabetic medications, are allowed. The dosage, duration and name of any concomitant treatment or medication must be recorded carefully in the CRFs.

Test drugs

The test drugs are SQTX Granule and placebo, which are indistinguishable from the actual medication. The placebo has the same shape, size, taste, colour, package and Lot number.

Intervention

Patients are administered SQTX Granule or placebo in one bag (0.5 g per bag) dissolved in warm water three times daily for 28 days. The follow-up visits last for one week after the treatment. The measurements that need to be performed at each visit are listed in Figure 2.

Figure 2
figure 2

Study schedule for patients. After the enrolment and allocation, participants will receive the administration for four weeks and a follow-up of eight weeks. The time-points of assessment are shown in the schedule.

Outcome assessment

Primary outcome

  •  Scores of IBS-quality of life rating scale (IBS-QOL) rating scale[21]

  •  Scores of IBS-symptom severity scale (IBS-SSS) rating scale[22]

Secondary outcome

  •  The symptom score system is introduced to quantify the degree of abdominal pain, diarrhea, stool consistency and other concomitant symptoms as shown in Figure 3, following the Guidelines for Clinical Research of New Chinese Medicine[20].

Figure 3
figure 3

Symptom score system. As a secondary outcome, a Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) symptom score system is introduced into this protocol.

  •  The treatment efficacy evaluation system is introduced to evaluate the improvement of symptoms using the percentage of symptom score reduction (PSSR). The PSSR for a patient after treatment is calculated according to the following formula:

    PSSR = Symptom score at Day 0 ‒ Symptom score at Day 28 Symptom score at Day 0 × 100 %

    Full recovery: PSSR ≥ 90%, Good recovery: 90% > PSSR ≥ 70%, Modest recovery: 70% > PSSR ≥ 30%, No recovery: PSSR < 30%.

  • Decreasing and disappearing time of abdominal pain and diarrhea:

    Decreasing time = (The day pain/diarrhea decrease) - Day 1

    Disappearing time = (The day pain/diarrhea disappear) - Day 1

Safety outcome

A routine blood test, routine urine test, routine stool test, faecal occult blood test, urine pregnancy test (women only), liver function test, renal function test and an electrocardiogram are administered for safety outcomes, which are monitored both before and after treatment.

Data management

After review by clinical inspectors, completed CRFs will be sent to a specified statistics centre, and data entry and management is completed by two individual data administrators to ensure the accuracy of the data. To ensure the database is created correctly after blind review, data will be locked by the clinical research leader, the sponsor and the statistical analyst, so that no changes are allowed to the locked data.

Adverse events

Adverse events will be recorded and graded in detail throughout the study. When a severe adverse event occurs, participants will be provided with every necessary treatment, and the event must be reported to the leader of the trial, ethics committees, sponsors and CFDA within 24 hours.

Data analysis

Statistical analysis will be conducted based on an intention-to-treat (ITT) principle. All subjects who were treated with at least one dose of the study drug and had at least one clinical observation after starting the treatment comprise FAS. All treated subjects without any major protocol deviations comprise PPS. The statistical analysis will be performed using the SAS 8.1 software (SAS, Cary, NC, USA). The statistical significance is defined as a two-sided P-value of < 0.05. Baseline differences among the groups will be assessed with the use of the one-factor analysis of variance or the Mann-Whitney U- test for measurement data and the χ2 test or the Wilcoxon test for enumeration data. For categorical variables, a χ2 test or Fisher’s exact test will be used. The changes from baseline to endpoint of treatment in scores will be assessed with the use of a paired t-test for measurement data and a signed rank test for enumeration data. Comparisons between groups will be conducted by using an analysis of variance (ANOVA) and a rank test.

Discussion

Characterised by continuous or intermittent abdominal pain, bloating, changes of bowel habits or stool consistency, IBS is a disease lacking any changes of gastrointestinal structure and biochemical abnormalities. Moreover, greatly impacting the function of the gut, psychological stress plays a fairly important role in inducing, aggravating and perpetuating the symptoms of IBS; thus, a portion of IBS patients exhibit mental disorders, mainly anxiety and depression[23–26]. No evidence of any pathological change is found. Current Western medicine provides limited symptomatic relief to IBS patients through pharmacological treatment; however, TCM has a long history spanning thousands of years, dealing with abdominal pain and diarrhea. In recent years, a group of studies confirmed the efficiency of TCM treatment on IBS[27–29]. As the most common type of IBS, IBS-D is characterised by abdominal pain/discomfort and diarrhea, mainly accompanied with emotional instability, which is the exact indication of SQTX Granule in our study. Pharmacological and toxicological research with SQTX Granule demonstrated the efficacy and safety in preclinical trials, respectively, and phase II clinical trials also indicate the improvement of symptoms without significant adverse events. A randomised, multi-centre, double-blind, placebo-controlled, superiority, phase III clinical trial will be helpful for further clarification of these results.

Trial status

At the time of manuscript submission, patient recruitment for the trial is on-going.

Abbreviations

ANOVA:

analysis of variance

CAM:

complementary and alternative medicines

CFDA:

China Food and Drug Administration

CRFs:

Case Report Forms

FAS:

Full Analysis Set

GI:

gastrointestinal

IBS:

irritable bowel syndrome

IBS-C:

IBS with constipation

IBS-D:

IBS with diarrhea

IBS-M:

mixed IBS

IBS-QOL:

IBS-quality of life

IBS-SSS:

IBS-symptom severity scale

IBS-U:

unsubtyped IBS

ITT:

intention-to-treat

PPS:

Per Protocol Set

PSSR:

percentage of symptom score reduction

SQTX Granule:

Shun-Qi-Tong-Xie Granule

TCM:

Traditional Chinese medicine

TXYF:

Tong-Xie-Yao-Fang

VAS:

Visual Analogue Scale.

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Acknowledgements

The study is financially supported by Shaanxi Bosen Biological Pharmaceutical Group Co. Ltd, Xi’an, China. The funding agency had no role in the development of the study design, data collection and analyses. Special thanks to all the patients who participated in this study.

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Correspondence to Jia Guo.

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The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

XXW participated in the design of the study and drafted the manuscript. RJL participated in the statistical design and helped in the design of the study. BS and YC helped to draft the manuscript. JG was the general supervisor for this research and participated in the critical revision of the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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Wang, Xx., Luo, Rj., She, B. et al. Traditional Chinese medicine (Shun-Qi-Tong-Xie Granule) for irritable bowel syndrome: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial. Trials 15, 273 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-15-273

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