Safety and Efficacy Study to Evaluate Different Combination Treatment Regimens for Visceral Leishmaniasis
Information source: Drugs for Neglected Diseases
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on October 19, 2009 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Visceral Leishmaniasis
Intervention: Amphotericin B Deoxycholate (Drug); Ambisome + Miltefosine (Drug); Ambisome and Paromomycin (Drug); Miltefosine and Paromomycin (Drug)
Phase: Phase 3
Status: Recruiting
Sponsored by: Drugs for Neglected Diseases Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): Farrokh Modabber, Study Director, Affiliation: Drugs for Neglected Diseases
Overall contact: Sally Ellis, Email: sellis@dndi.org
Summary
The overall objective of this trial is to identify a safe and effective combination,
(coadministration) short course treatment for the treatment of visceral leishmaniasis which
could be easily deployed in a control programme and will reduce the risk of parasite
resistance occurring.
Safety and tolerability should be such that the combination can be easily deployed.
Clinical Details
Official title: Randomized, Open-Label, Parallel-Group, Safety & Efficacy Study to Evaluate Different Combination Treatment Regimens, of Either AmBisome and Paromomycin, AmBisome and Miltefosine, or Paromomycin and Miltefosine Compared With Amphotericin B Deoxycholate (the Standard) Therapy for the Treatment of Acute, Symptomatic Visceral Leishmaniasis (VL).
Study design: Treatment, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Parallel Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: Definitive cure based on parasitological clearance at Day 15 after start of combination therapy (Day 31 for standard therapy), no evidence of parasites at day 45 and no clinical signs or symptoms of VL at 6 months post treatment.
Detailed description:
New, effective, less toxic and simplified treatments are urgently needed to replace or
complement the few currently available drugs to treat visceral Leishmaniasis. An interim
strategy and one which will slow the emergence of resistant parasite strains is to use
coadministration of currently available drugs.
In India, first line treatment is now amphotericin B which is administered as an intravenous
infusion, on alternate days over a 4 week period. A liposomal formulation of amphotericin B,
AmBisome, is also available, and is substantially less nephrotoxic than amphotericin B, but
is expensive.
It is acknowledged that AmBisome is the most effective therapy for visceral leishmaniasis,
but it's high cost has hampered implementation. Use as part of a combination treatment,
potentially as a single, lower dose, could reduce treatment costs considerably and thereby
increase access for patients.
Two new treatments have recently been licensed in India for the treatment of patients with
VL,
- Paromomycin administered as an intramuscular injection, once daily for 21 days
- Miltefosine administered as an oral tablet, once daily for 28 days. These drugs are now
being used as monotherapy with high risk of emergence of resistant parasites. With
price reduction for AmBisome, preferential pricing for Miltefosine and the concern for
emergence of resistant parasites due to monotherapy, it is time to move rapidly toward
obtaining definitive data for making recommendations on combination therapy as soon as
possible, before these valuable drugs become useless. The present protocol will be a
definitive Phase-III trial with the aim that at the end of this trial, strong
evidence-based recommendations on combination therapy with available drugs can be made
to Authorities in the Indian sub-continent. This protocol will evaluate various
combinations of the three drugs; AmBisome, Paromomycin and Miltefosine at reduced total
dosage and in shorter courses, against the present standard treatment with amphotericin
B deoxycholate.
Eligibility
Minimum age: 18 Years.
Maximum age: 60 Years.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Adults ( male or female) 18-60 years of age
- Acute, symptomatic, non-severe (minimum Hb. 5 gm/dL) VL proven by parasitological
examination of splenic or bone marrow aspirate.
- History of fever.
- Living within reachable distance of the trial site to enable attendance for follow-up
visits
- Written informed consent to participate
- Proven HIV negative status
- Women of child-bearing potential who are using an assured method of contraception
Exclusion Criteria:
- Signs/symptoms indicative of severe VL ( Hb.< 5gm/dl, evidence of cardiac failure,
etc)
- Patients who have received anti-leishmanial or anti-fungal treatment within the last
45 days
- Patients who have received any investigational (unlicensed) drugs within the last 6
months
- Severe malnutrition BMI<15 in adults, weight for height less than 60% in children.
- Chronic underlying disease such as severe cardiac, renal, or hepatic impairment.
- Renal function tests (serum creatinine) outside the normal range
- Liver function tests (transaminases) more than three times the upper limit of the
normal range at study entry
- Jaundice (bilirubin >2. 0mg/dL)
- Known hepatitis B or C positive
- Platelet count less than 40,000/mm3
- Prothrombin time 5 seconds or greater than normal range
- TotalWBC < 1,000/mm3
- Known alcohol or other drug abuse
- HIV positive status
- Pregnancy and/or lactation
- Females having unprotected sexual intercourse, or using a non-assured method of
contraception (e. g. condom)
- Concomitant chronic drug treatment eg for diabetes, hypertension, TB, HIV etc
- Concomitant drug usage for acute infection, eg malaria, pneumonia etc within the last
7 days
- Any other condition which may invalidate the trial
- Known hypersensitivity to AmBisome, Paromomycin, amphotericin B and/or Miltefosine
Locations and Contacts
Sally Ellis, Email: sellis@dndi.org
Kala-azar medical centre, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India; Recruiting Shyam Sundar, MD, Email: doctorshyamsundar@gmail.com Shyam Sundar, MD, Principal Investigator
Rajendra Memorial research Institute, Patna, Bihar, India; Recruiting P K Sinha, MD, Email: pksinha18@yahoo.com P K, Sinha, Principal Investigator
Additional Information
Starting date: June 2008
Ending date: December 2009
Last updated: June 12, 2008
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