Cholera Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized, Double Blind, Controlled Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Multiple-dose Ciprofloxacin With Single Dose Azithromycin Therapy for Adults With Cholera Due to Multiply Resistant Strains of V. Cholerae O1 or O139
Cholera is an important diarrhoeal disease and an important cause of death, particularly
during epidemic outbreaks, in Bangladesh and many other developing countries. Used as an
adjunct to management of dehydration, antimicrobial therapy using an appropriate agent
reduces diarrhoea duration and stool volume in severe cholera by about half.
The usefulness of antimicrobials has, however, been greatly eroded by the increasing
prevalence of resistant strains of V. cholerae O1. From October 2004 at the Matlab Hospital
and from December 2004 at the Dhaka Hospital of ICDDR, B, V. cholerae strains became
increasingly resistant to tetracycline and erythromycin- two drugs used in the treatment of
severe cholera in adults and children respectively. Because of this high prevalence of
resistance we resorted in early 2005 to using ciprofloxacin for treatment against multi drug
resistant V. cholerae. Although all isolates were susceptible to ciprofloxacin when standard
thresholds for disc-diffusion or E-test were used, but majority of the strains demonstrated
a MIC value of 0.250 µg/ml, over hundred-folds greater than the V. cholerae strains tested
in earlier years, which generally had a MIC of <0.003 µg/ml.
In this randomized, double blind, controlled trial we will assess clinical and
bacteriological response to 12 hourly oral dose of ciprofloxacin for 3 days in which the
first two doses will be 1 g each and the later 4 doses will be 500 mg each, and compare them
with a single 1 g oral dose of azithromycin. We are using azithromycin as the comparator
drug because current circulating V. cholerae isolates are susceptible (MIC ≤ 0.125 µg/ml) to
this azithromycin, and single-dose azithromycin has been evaluated earlier to be effective
in the treatment of cholera.
Cholera is caused by infection of the human intestine with Vibrio cholerae O1 or V. cholerae
O139. It is a major health problem in many developing countries including Bangladesh.1 The
importance of cholera as a worldwide public health problem is evident from the large number
of countries affected by cholera epidemics.2 Data of the Diarrhoeal Disease Surveillance
system of the Dhaka Hospital demonstrated that V. cholera O1 was the most frequently
isolated pathogens (617/2,068 i.e. 30%) in patients attending the hospital with diarrhoeal
illnesses in 2006. By extrapolating the number of patients enrolled in the surveillance
system we estimate that over 30,000 out of the total 106,531 patients attending the hospital
in 2006 had cholera- a huge number of patients indeed.
Like other diarrhoeal illnesses, prevention and management of dehydration using appropriate
oral and/or intravenous fluids is the mainstay in the management of cholera, irrespective of
severity. However, appropriate antimicrobial therapy is a very useful adjunct therapy that
reduces the duration of diarrhoea, the volume of diarrhoeal stools (thus the amount of oral
and intravenous fluids), and also the duration of faecal excretion of the pathogen, V.
cholerae O1 and O139 by about 50%. 3-6 Based on these observations made in numerous clinical
trials, routine use of an appropriate antimicrobial therapy is recommended in the management
of severe cholera, both in adults and children. All three benefits, as described above, are
very important in resources-constraint settings where cholera is endemic and also during
epidemic outbreaks.
Nosocomial transmission of cholera has also been increasingly recognized as an important
problem,7 and reducing the duration of excretion of Vibrio cholerae in the stool associated
with appropriate antimicrobial therapy will presumably decrease the rate of nosocomial
infection. Lastly, by shortening the course of illness, patients and their families' can
more quickly return to their normal life, lessening their financial burden, which is of
particular relevance to socio-economically disadvantaged population who disproportionately
share the most of the disease burden from cholera.
From the time of the initial controlled trials of antimicrobial therapy for cholera, almost
four decades ago,3 a number of antimicrobial agents have been evaluated to be useful in the
treatment of cholera. Tetracycline, chloramphenicol, doxycycline, furazolidone and
trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole have all been found to be effective in the treatment of
cholera when given in multiple doses for 3 days.8-14 Tetracycline and it's long-acting
congener doxycycline are also effective when administered in a single 1 or 2 g and 200 or
300 mg oral doses respectively in adults.13, 14 Vomiting is a common problem in association
with doxycycline therapy and the problem is greater when doxycycline is used in 300 mg dose
(39%) compared to when 200 mg dose is used (30%); however, the therapeutic efficacy is
better with the higher dose (mean duration of diarrhoea were 32h vs. 40h respectively.14
Antimicrobial resistance has now become an important problem in the clinical management of
cholera. For example, in 2006 virtually all of the 683 clinical strains of V. cholerae O1
isolated from patients attending the Dhaka Hospital were multiply drug resistant with 100%
resistance to ampicillin, furazolidone and co-trimoxazole, 83% to erythromycin and 85% to
tetracycline.15 All V. cholerae strains remained susceptible to ciprofloxacin by
disc-diffusion testing, but in E-test their MIC were noted to have increased from 0.002
µg/ml during 1993-2003 to 0.250-0.380 µg/ml in 2006
Resistance of V. cholerae to commonly used drugs such as tetracycline, doxycycline,
furazolidone and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole have also been reported from Asia, Africa and
Latin America,17-20 In the early 1990's increasing prevalence of V. cholerae resistant to
antimicrobials commonly used in the treatment of cholera (tetracycline, ampicillin,
co-trimoxazole) prompted our group and others to conduct series of trials to identify newer
affective agents for treatment of cholera. We evaluated ciprofloxacin in both adult and
children infected with V. cholerae O1 and O139, and observed very good rates of both
clinical and bacteriological response when used in multiple doses or in a single dose
administered only once.11, 21, 22
Ciprofloxacin, is a member of the class of drugs called fluoroquinolones, which act by
blocking the action of bacterial DNA gyrase.23 This enzyme, which is not present in human
cells, is responsible for supercoiling of bacterial DNA, an essential element for DNA
functions.24 Without the three-dimensional DNA structure the cell is unable to replicate,
and thus bacterial growth is rapidly halted. Ciprofloxacin is the most active of the
fluorinated 4-quinolones (ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin, ofloxacin) against bacterial diarrhoea
pathogens in-vitro as assessed by MIC. It has a relatively long serum half-life.25 Due to
its multiple mechanisms of excretion toxic levels of quinolones do not usually accumulate in
the body. Experience suggests that resistance against ciprofloxacin develops much more
slowly than against the older quinolone agent such as nalidixic acid, as the rate of
spontaneous mutation is much lower and multiple mutations are required to confer frank
resistance.26, 27 Increases in the MIC, however, can occur with single mutation, and this is
the likely sequence that has occurred among currently circulating V. cholerae isolates in
Bangladesh.
Because of resistance to other agents and susceptibility of the isolates to ciprofloxacin
in-vitro, disc diffusion tests, Dhaka and Matlab Hospitals of ICDDR, B changed their
treatment policy (early 2005) to single-dose ciprofloxacin therapy for treatment of cholera
irrespective of patients' age, except for cholera in pregnant women. However, experienced
physicians at the Dhaka Hospital quickly noted sub-optimal clinical response to
ciprofloxacin therapy- higher stool output and longer hospitalisation. A quick review of the
clinical study that we recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine confirmed
these findings.28 In that study only 26 (27%) of 98 patients who were infected with V.
cholerae O1 experienced an optimal clinical response to single-dose ciprofloxacin, while
only 10 (10%) of the 98 patients had a bacteriologic cure, as defined in the protocol.
Eventual determination of MICs of the V. cholerae strains from that study revealed that the
inferior clinical and bacteriological response to ciprofloxacin was associated with an
increase in MIC values.29 Table 1 below shows the increase in ciprofloxacin MIC values that
were observed during 1993-1994 when we first conducted clinical trials with ciprofloxacin to
subsequent years including in 2005 when ciprofloxacin was first introduced for routine use
in the treatment of cholera at the Dhaka Hospital. We can see, the median MICs has increased
approximately one hundred folds between 1993 and 2006.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT01895855 -
Safety and Efficacy Challenge Study of Live Oral Cholera Vaccine Candidate,PXVX0200, to Prevent Cholera
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT01339845 -
Introduction of Cholera Vaccine in Bangladesh
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05829772 -
Impact Study of Cholera Vaccination in Endemic Areas - Seroprevalence
|
||
Completed |
NCT04760236 -
Immune Non-Inferiority, Safety and Lot-to-Lot Consistency of Oral Cholera Vaccine-Simplified Compared to Shancholâ„¢
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04326478 -
Single Dose Azithromycin to Prevent Cholera in Children
|
Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT06104345 -
Immune Response Elicited by Concomitant Administration of Oral Typhoid Fever (Vivotif®) and Cholera (Dukoral®) Vaccines
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT02928341 -
Impact Evaluation of Urban Water Supply Improvements on Cholera and Other Diarrhoeal Diseases in Uvira, Democratic Republic of Congo
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02864433 -
Evaluation of a Pilot Program to Introduce Cholera Vaccine in Haiti as Part of Global Cholera Control Efforts
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT06003816 -
Cholera-Hospital-Based-Intervention-for-7-Days (CHoBI7) Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) Case Area Targeted Intervention (CATI)
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05771779 -
Co-administration Study of OCV, TCV and MR
|
Phase 3 | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06455852 -
Correlates of Protection for Cholera
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04150250 -
Cholera Anti-Secretory Treatment Trial
|
Phase 2 | |
Terminated |
NCT00624975 -
Safety and Immunogenicity of Peru-15 Vaccine When Given With Measles Vaccine in Healthy Indian and Bangladeshi Infants
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT00226616 -
Zinc Supplementation in Cholera Patients
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT03373669 -
Effect of Extended Dose Intervals on the Immune Response to Oral Cholera Vaccine
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT02100631 -
A Study of Live Oral Cholera Vaccine, PXVX200 in Healthy Older Adults
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT02094586 -
A Phase 3 Lot to Lot Consistency Study of Live Oral Cholera Vaccine, PXVX0200 in Healthy Adults
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT01823939 -
PK Study of iOWH032 in Adult Male/Female Healthy Volunteers & Adult Males With Cholera
|
Phase 1 | |
Completed |
NCT01365442 -
Pilot Introduction of Oral Cholera Vaccine in Orissa, India
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00128011 -
Safety and Immunogenicity of a New Formulation of a Bivalent Killed, Whole-Cell Oral Cholera Vaccine
|
Phase 2 |