Study design and treatments
The trial consisted of two phases (Figure 4). The first phase consisted of a breath hydrogen test that included a challenge of 2 g/kg of a 20% sucrose solution plus one of three single-dose treatments: placebo, sacrosidase, or sacrosidase with milk. In the second phase, patients were randomized to one of four doses of sacrosidase for a 10-day treatment period and crossed over to other dosages in random order until a 40-day treatment period was completed. The administered volume of sacrosidase oral solution was weight-dependent: 1 mL/meal if body weight was ≤15 kg and 2 mL/meal if body weight was >15 kg.3
Assessments and endpoints
Stool frequency and consistency, symptoms, and dietary data were recorded daily and compared with baseline values obtained during the study period when the patients consumed a sucrose-free diet without sacrosidase. Dietary assessments of sucrose and carbohydrate consumption were summarized for each treatment period during the dose-response phase to verify whether patients were compliant with a normal diet, defined as 2 g/kg/d sucrose and 5 g/kg/d carbohydrate.3
The primary efficacy variables included the total number of stools and total symptom scores collected during the dose-response phase. All other measurements were secondary. During the dose-response phase, the number of stools and severity of symptoms (gas, bloating, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal cramps) were recorded daily by each patient and assigned values ranging from zero (none) to three (severe). A post hoc responder assessment (asymptomatic yes/no) was also determined.3
Results
Of the 28 patients in this trial who received ≥1 dose of sacrosidase, 26 (93%) completed both phases of the trial. All 28 patients participated in the first phase sucrase hydrogen breath test. When the subjects were administered the 20% sucrose solution plus placebo, the incidence of the subsequent gastrointestinal symptoms was: 81% diarrhea, 58% gas, 38% bloating, and 54% cramps.3
In the dose-response phase, significant differences were observed between the two higher concentrations (undiluted and 1:10 dilution) and the two lower concentrations of sacrosidase (1:100 and 1:1,000 dilution) for both primary outcome variables—total number of stools and total symptom scores Table 1).3