Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT04713787

A Safety and Efficacy Study of Different Doses of Oxfendazole Compared to a Single Dose of Albendazole to Treat Trichuris Trichiura Infection in Adults

A Phase 2, Partially-Blinded, Randomized, Comparative Study of the Efficacy of Different Doses of Oxfendazole Compared to a Single Dose of Albendazole for the Treatment of Trichuris Trichiura Infection in Adults

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
249 (estimated)
Sponsor
Asociacion Benefica Prisma · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a Phase 2 trial to evaluate the efficacy of different doses of oxfendazole versus a single dose of albendazole in curing or reducing the egg burden in subjects with T. trichiura infections. 249 subjects will be randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to one of three dose-groups to receive a single dose of oxfendazole 400 mg or 800 mg, or a single dose of albendazole 400 mg. The study team members and study subjects will not be blinded to the dose group. However, the laboratory assessors evaluating the stool samples will be blinded. Subjects will be recruited in Iquitos, Peru, and surrounding villages where there is a high prevalence of T. trichiura infection. Subjects will be solicited through town hall meetings and local clinics and through recommendations from local care providers. A two-stage screening process will be utilized. If subjects are found on the screening stool exam to have only a stool parasite other than T. trichuria or if the subject chooses not to participate in the study, the subject will be referred to a local health provider. If stool analysis performed at the end of the study period demonstrates stool parasites, the subjects will be contacted and referred to their local health provider where they will receive standard of care treatment. The primary objective is to assess the cure rate of different dose regimens of oxfendazole vs. albendazole in the treatment of T. trichiura infections using the Kato-Katz stool examination method.

Detailed description

This is a Phase 2 trial to evaluate the efficacy of different doses of oxfendazole versus a single dose of albendazole in curing or reducing the egg burden in subjects with T. trichiura infections. 249 subjects will be randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to one of three dose-groups to receive a single dose of oxfendazole 400 mg or 800 mg, or a single dose of albendazole 400 mg. Water and a snack will be provided to aid in ingestion of the study product and a study team member will observe the ingestion of study product. The study team members and study subjects will not be blinded to the dose group. However, the laboratory assessors evaluating the stool samples will be blinded. Subjects will be recruited in Iquitos, Peru, and surrounding villages where there is a high prevalence of T. trichiura infection. Subjects will be solicited through town hall meetings and local clinics and through recommendations from local care providers. A two-stage screening process will be utilized. If subjects are found on the screening stool exam to have only a stool parasite other than T. trichuria or if the subject chooses not to participate in the study, the subject will be referred to a local health provider. If stool analysis performed at the end of the study period demonstrates stool parasites, the subjects will be contacted and referred to their local health provider where they will receive standard of care treatment. The primary objective is to assess the cure rate of different dose regimens of oxfendazole vs. albendazole in the treatment of T. trichiura infections using the Kato-Katz stool examination method. The secondary objectives are to: 1) assess the cure rate of different dose regimens of oxfendazole vs albendazole in the treatment of T. trichiura infections using the stool concentration examination method, 2) assess the clinical response compared to baseline, as shown by reduction in T. trichiura egg counts using the Kato-Katz stool examination method, 3) assess the clinical response compared to baseline, as shown by reduction in T. trichiura egg counts using the stool concentration method, 4) assess the proportion of subjects with moderate or heavy infection before treatment who had no infection or only light infection after treatment using the Kato-Katz stool examination method, 5) assess the proportion of subjects with moderate or heavy infection before treatment who had no infection or only light infection after treatment using the stool concentration examination method, 6) establish the spectrum of activity of oxfendazole against other intestinal helminths using the Kato-Katz stool examination method, 7) establish the spectrum of activity of oxfendazole against other intestinal helminths using the stool concentration examination method, 8) assess the tolerability of each oxfendazole dose group compared to the albendazole dose group, and 9) assess the safety in subjects treated with oxfendazole.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGAlbendazoleAlbendazole, 5-(prophylthio)-2-benzimidazole carbamate, is a broad-spectrum benzimidazole antihelminthic drug. It is provided as a white to off-white, circular, film-coated tablet with a slightly raised pentagonal projection on either side. This trial will use the 400 mg tablet formulation.
DRUGOxfendazoleThe active pharmaceutical ingredient is methyl-5 (6)-phenylsulfiyl-2-benzimidazole carbamate, which is a broad-spectrum benzimidazole antihelminthic. Oxfendazole is the sulphoxide metabolite of fenbendazole.

Timeline

Start date
2024-09-07
Primary completion
2026-01-30
Completion
2026-06-30
First posted
2021-01-19
Last updated
2025-07-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Peru

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04713787. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.