Pseudomembranous Colitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Vancomycin Vs. Nitazoxanide to Treat Clostridium Difficile Colitis That Has Failed Therapy With Metronidazole
The purpose of this study is to compare the outcome of treatment with nitazoxanide vs. vancomycin for diarrheal disease due to Clostridium difficile in patients who have failed previous treatment with metronidazole.
Clostridium difficile is the leading cause of nosocomial diarrheal disease associated with
antibiotic therapy. This is a debilitating condition with substantial morbidity and a
mortality that used to be said to be around 2-3%, but that has recently been shown by us
(Clin Infect. Dis, July, 2005) and others (Pepin et al, Clin. Infect. Dis., July, 2005) to
be substantially higher -- approximately 15-20%. There has been an enormous increase in this
disease at the VA medical center during the past two years, just as has occurred at other
hospitals throughout the United States and the developed world.
Although orally administered vancomycin was the first drug to be approved in treating C.
difficile colitis, and remains the only one with the official approval by the Food and Drug
Administration, the currently recommended therapy for this condition is metronidazole, given
orally. This drug was recommended because: (1) the cost of vancomycin was exceedingly high;
(2) there was concern that vancomycin-resistant bacteria might appear in hospitals if the
drug was used to treat large number of patients; and (3) these recommendations were made at
a time that the cure rate from metronidazole was thought to approach 100%.
We have recently shown that 23% of patients fail to respond to initial therapy with
metronidazole, and another 27% relapse after treatment (Musher et al, Clin Infect Dis, July,
2005). Others have confirmed these observations (Pepin et al, Clin Infect Dis, July 2005).
The options for treating failure or relapse are limited. Another course of metronidazole may
cure about one-half of patients. Oral vancomycin may be used, but this drug also has a
failure rate of 10-20% and the concerns about its use remain.
Based on this background, we became interested in studying nitazoxanide. This is an FDA
approved drug, marketed in the United States and widely used throughout the world to treat
parasitic diseases of the gastrointestinal tract; several million children have been treated
with this drug during the past decade. The drug acts by interfering with anaerobic metabolic
pathways, and it has been shown to have excellent in vitro activity against C. difficile. We
hypothesized that this drug was both safe and effective as an alternative in patients who
have diarrheal disease caused by C. difficile. The IRB approved a double-blind protocol to
compare metronidazole with nitazoxanide, and we have completed that trial.
The results of this study were very favorable. A 10-day course of oral nitazoxanide produced
a cure of symptoms at 7 days of about 90% and a cure without relapse at 31 days of about 79%
compared to 84% and 56%, respectively, for metronidazole. Because of the small numbers of
subjects, these differences were not statistically significant, but the results certainly
appeared promising. A manuscript has just been submitted to Clin Infect Dis describing this
study.
We now propose to compare nitazoxanide to vancomycin in the group of patients most in need
of alternative therapy, namely those who have been treated with metronidazole and have
failed or have had a recurrence of disease after an initial response.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Retrospective
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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