Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00367081

Treatment of Cerebral Toxoplasmosis in HIV/AIDS

Pyrimethamine Plus Sulfadiazine Versus Trimethoprim Plus Sulfamethoxazole for Treatment of Toxoplasmic Encephalitis in AIDS Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (planned)
Sponsor
Department of Medical Services Ministry of Public Health of Thailand · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Neurological manifestations of Cerebral toxoplasmosis or Toxoplasmic encephalitis (TE) in most advance stage HIV infected patients composed of fever, headache, alteration of consciousness with focal neurological signs/symptoms such as include hemiparesis, cranial nerve palsies, and ataxia. Generalised convulsions, in ¾ of patients. Moreover meningeal irritation sign or herniation sign may be presented as life threatening condition

Detailed description

Background: Toxoplasmic encephalitis (TE), caused by Toxoplasma gondii, is common in AIDS patients. TE can result in tissue destruction via massive inflammation and brain abscess formation. METHODS: Randomized controlled trials were performed in AIDS patients to assess which drug regimen was optimally effective for the treatment of TE. AIDS patients with TE were randomly divided into 3 groups that received a 6-week course of either pyrimethamine (50 mg/ day or 100 mg/day) plus sulfadiazine (4 g/day) and folinic acid (25 mg/day) or trimethoprim (10 mg/kg/day) plus sulfamethoxazole (50 mg/kg/day) (TMP-SMX), and results were evaluated with respect to clinical response, mortality, morbidity, and serious adverse events. The primary outcome was defined as death in the first 6-week period. The secondary outcome was successful treatment within 6 weeks without severe adverse events, bone marrow suppression, drug-induced rash, or any other event that caused a change in the treatment regimen. RESULTS: The results from this study showed that in AIDS patients, TE was most successfully treated with the combination of pyrimethamine (50 mg/day) plus sulfadiazidine (4 g/day) and folinic acid (25 mg/day); failure rates were not significantly different among the 3 treatment groups. Conclusions: Available data suggest that of the currently available options, treatment of TE with pyrimethamine at 50 mg/day plus sulfadiazidine at 4 g/day provides the best primary outcome for AIDS patients with TE; however, because this study was terminated prematurely, we suggest that treatment with intravenous TMP-SMX be further evaluated to determine its efficacy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGTMX-SMX (Bactrim(R))
DRUGPyrimethamine plus Sulfadiazine plus leucoverin

Timeline

Start date
2003-05-01
Completion
2004-08-01
First posted
2006-08-22
Last updated
2007-07-31

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Thailand

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00367081. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.