Food Science & Nutrition (Dec 2023)

Randomized trial to assess the efficacy and safety of xyloglucan for the treatment of acute gastroenteritis in children

  • Maria Jose Perez‐Garcia,
  • Ana Royuela,
  • Francisco‐Javier Rodriguez‐Contreras,
  • Maria Angeles PandoBravo,
  • Cristina Chiatti,
  • Carmen Ramos,
  • Mario Arana‐Zumaquero,
  • Maria Isabel Gonzalez‐Marcos,
  • Juncal Diaz,
  • Maria Cristina Fresno‐Calle,
  • Ruth García‐Bartolomé,
  • Susana Viver,
  • Serena Villaverde‐Gonzalez,
  • Maria Luz Cilleruelo‐Pascual,
  • Carolina Gutierrez‐Junquera,
  • Alejandro Rasines‐Rodriguez,
  • Alba Manso‐Pérez,
  • Enriqueta Román‐Riechmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.3688
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
pp. 7698 – 7706

Abstract

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Abstract Acute gastroenteritis is one of the most common diseases in children and an important cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. No specific treatment is available; therefore, management is exclusively symptomatic. Xyloglucan has been approved in Europe as a class IIa medical device for restoration of the physiological functions of the intestinal wall. Our objective was to assess efficacy and safety of xyloglucan for the treatment of acute gastroenteritis in children. We performed a triple‐blind, randomized placebo‐controlled clinical trial in four primary care centers and one continued care hospital center. The study population comprised children with acute gastroenteritis aged >3 months and <5 years. Our primary endpoint was time (in hours) of resolution of diarrhea, defined as the time to resolution of stool consistency (Bristol Stool Form Scale ≤5 or Amsterdam Stool Form Scale B or C) or time until deposition frequency resumes to normality, whichever occurred first. We also recorded intravenous rehydration, hospitalization, stools per day, Vesikari scale, vomiting, relapse, weight loss, drugs prescribed, and adverse events. Eighty children were included in the intention‐to‐treat population (43 xyloglucan and 37 placebo) and 74 (93%) in the per‐protocol population. Time to resolution of diarrhea was similar in both groups with (median, 95% CI) 24, 17–24 h in the xyloglucan group versus 24, 19–24 h in the placebo group, p = .680. Significant differences were observed for patients with moderate‐to‐severe diarrhea (Vesikari scale ≥9): xyloglucan group (20 [15–24] h) versus placebo group (85 [51–120] h) (p = .04). No other significant differences were found. Xyloglucan can be considered safe and other studies should be performed to confirm the usefulness in patients with moderate‐to‐severe diarrhea.

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