Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01382004

Single-dose Azithromycin for the Treatment of Yaws

Single-dose Azithromycin Versus Penicillin G Benzathine for the Treatment of Yaws in Children

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
255 (actual)
Sponsor
Lihir Medical Centre · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Months – 15 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Yaws, an endemic treponematosis and as such a neglected tropical disease (NTD), is currently making a comeback in children in rural areas. Injectable long acting penicillin remains the drug of choice for the treatment of yaws. However, on the basis of successful experience with venereal syphilis in large-scale studies, oral azithromycin has emerged as a potential alternative that overcomes the major medical and logistic disadvantages of the current regimen. In this non-inferiority randomized clinical trial the investigators propose a comparable scheme for the treatment of yaws, to test the efficacy of a single, oral dose of azithromycin versus a single, i.m. dose of benzathine penicillin G.Sample size has been calculated to detect a non-inferiority margin of 10%. Children \< 15 years of age with a confirmed diagnosis of yaws will be randomly assigned to receive 30mg/Kg (maximum 2g) of azithromycin orally or 50.000units/Kg (maximum 2.4MU) of penicillin-G-benzathine intramuscularly. The primary outcome is treatment efficacy, with cure defined serologically (a decline in the VDRL titer of at least two dilutions by six months after treatment) and, in primary yaws, also by epithelialization of ulcers within two weeks.

Detailed description

Regulatory status: Investigational - Randomized Clinical Trial. Registered product for antibacterial therapy BACKGROUND Penicillin remains the drug of choice for the treatment of endemic treponematoses including yaws. This type of treatment is effective and cheap. There are, however, some disadvantages: the pain associated with a large volume (4 ml) deep i.m. injection, a high prevalence of self-reported allergy to penicillin, structural and logistic problems related to a treatment based on injection of drugs. Azithromycin, a macrolide antibiotic with a long (68 hours) half-life in tissue and proven efficacy against T.pallidum is a promising candidate. In two randomized trials, for the treatment of syphilis in adults, a single 2-g oral dose of azithromycin achieved cure rates equivalent to that of standard treatment with 2.4 MU of penicillin G benzathine. On the basis of experience with venereal syphilis, azithromycin has emerged as an alternative treatment for Yaws. It represents a more accessible treatment as it could be prescribed by village health workers and therefore enable yaws control to be more easily incorporated into other primary health-care programmes. The product is available as an oral tablet to be administered at a single dose of 30mg/Kg in children and 2 g in adults. Safety and efficacy using azithromycin 30 mg/kg given as a single dose in the treatment of pediatric patients over 6 months of age with otitis media have been established and approved by the FDA. INFORMED CONSENT All participants (or their guardian or parents) who are eligible for enrolment in the trial according to biological and demographic inclusion criteria are provided with detailed information on the purpose of the trial and on risks and benefits of participation, according to information listed in an information sheet. Consent is provided in writing. SAMPLE SIZE JUSTIFICATION The sample size would be 244; It was calculated on the basis of a non-inferiority trial design and the following assumptions: Statistical power of 80 percent;to exclude the possibility that the absolute efficacy of azithromycin was at least 10% percent less than that of penicillin; 5% significance level using a one-sided equivalence test of proportions; assuming that the true efficacy of each agent was equivalent at 95 percent and that approximately 10 percent of participants would be lost to follow-up. RANDOMIZATION PROCEDURE A random allocation schedule, stratified according to study group, will be generated centrally with the use of blocked randomization, random permuted blocks of four, and a 1:1 allocation ratio. The allocation will be concealed from investigators through the use of sequentially numbered, sealed envelopes

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGPenicillin-G-benzathineScreening examination: Medical history (emphasis on skin lesions and bone signs) Physical examination.Blood samples for VDRL and TPHA. Clinical safety. Laboratory evaluations: haemoglobin, total WBC count, differential WBC count, platelet count, ALT, AST, urea and creatinine. Routine assessments: General clinical assessment and physical examination on Days 0 (treatment administered) and 14. Adverse events and concomitant medications (at baseline, Day 14 and in any unscheduled visit). Photograph documentation of skin lesions (at 14 days follow up visit). Follow-up visits performed on 3 and 6 will have a ± 14 days allowable window
DRUGAzithromycinScreening examination: Medical history (emphasis on skin lesions and bone signs) Physical examination.Blood samples for VDRL and TPHA. Clinical safety. Laboratory evaluations: haemoglobin, total WBC count, differential WBC count, platelet count, ALT, AST, urea and creatinine. Routine assessments: General clinical assessment and physical examination on Days 0 (treatment administered) and 14. Adverse events and concomitant medications (at baseline, Day 14 and in any unscheduled visit). Photograph documentation of skin lesions (at 14 days follow up visit). Follow-up visits performed on 3 and 6 will have a ± 14 days allowable window

Timeline

Start date
2010-09-01
Primary completion
2011-09-01
Completion
2011-09-01
First posted
2011-06-27
Last updated
2012-04-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Papua New Guinea

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01382004. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.