Skin Infections, Bacterial Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized, Double-Blind, Multicenter, Placebo-controlled, Phase III Superiority Study to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of Topical Retapamulin Ointment, 1%, Versus Placebo Ointment Applied Twice Daily for 5 Days in the Treatment of Adult and Pediatric Subjects With SITL
Verified date | August 2012 |
Source | GlaxoSmithKline |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Food and Drug Administration |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of Study TOC110977 is to demonstrate clinical superiority of Retapamulin ointment, 1%, over placebo in patients with secondarily-infected traumatic lesions, which includes secondarily-infected lacerations, abrasions and sutured wounds. Subjects 2 months of age and older will be treated with topical retapamulin or placebo ointment twice daily for 5 days. The primary endpoint of this study is the clinical response at follow-up (Day 12-14; 7-9 days after the end of therapy) in the intent-to-treat clinical population.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 508 |
Est. completion date | October 2009 |
Est. primary completion date | October 2009 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 2 Months and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion criteria: - subject is aged 2 months or older - subject has secondarily-infected traumatic lesion (laceration, sutured wound or abrasion) - negative urine pregnancy test - subject has total skin infection rating scale score of at least 8, including pus/exudate score of at least 3 - subject and/or parent/legal guardian is willing and able to comply with protocol - subject or parent/legal guardian has given written informed consent or assent as applicable Exclusion criteria: - previous hypersensitivity to pleuromutilin - secondarily-infected animal/human bite or puncture wound - subject has an abscess - chronic ulcerative lesion - underlying skin disease - systemic signs and symptoms of infection - infection not appropriately treated with topical antibiotic - infection requires surgical intervention prior to or during study - subject received systemic antibacterial or steroid, or topical therapeutic agent within 24 hours of entry into study - serious underlying disease - subject pregnant, breast feeding or planning a pregnancy, or unacceptable method of contraception - other investigational drug within 30 days of study entry - subject previously enrolled in this study |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Argentina | GSK Investigational Site | Buenos Aires | |
Argentina | GSK Investigational Site | Buenos Aires | |
Argentina | GSK Investigational Site | Chivilocoy | Buenos Aires |
Argentina | GSK Investigational Site | Loma Hermosa | Buenos Aires |
Brazil | GSK Investigational Site | Curitiba | Paraná |
Brazil | GSK Investigational Site | Curitiba/Paraná | Paraná |
Brazil | GSK Investigational Site | Passo Fundo | Rio Grande Do Sul |
India | GSK Investigational Site | Bangalore | |
India | GSK Investigational Site | Lucknow | |
India | GSK Investigational Site | Pune | |
India | GSK Investigational Site | Vadodara | |
India | GSK Investigational Site | Wardha | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Belville | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Benoni | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Cape Town | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Cape Town | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Hatfield | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Lynnwood | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Midrand | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Newton | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Welkom | |
South Africa | GSK Investigational Site | Worcester | |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Anaheim | California |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Arlington Heights | Illinois |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Bountiful | Utah |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Brooklyn | New York |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Brooklyn | New York |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Butte | Montana |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Cincinnati | Ohio |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Colorado Springs | Colorado |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Deerfield Beach | Florida |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | East Syracuse | New York |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Fresno | California |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Greenville | South Carolina |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Hollywood | Florida |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Houston | Texas |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Irvine | California |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Johnson City | New York |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Kansas City | Kansas |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Los Angeles | California |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Miami | Florida |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Miami | Florida |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | New Orleans | Louisiana |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Norristown | Pennsylvania |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Orlando | Florida |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Panama City | Florida |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Sacramento | California |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Tampa | Florida |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Teaneck | New Jersey |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Tucson | Arizona |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Uniontown | Pennsylvania |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Vero Beach | Florida |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | Vienna | Virginia |
United States | GSK Investigational Site | West Palm Beach | Florida |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
GlaxoSmithKline |
United States, Argentina, Brazil, India, South Africa,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Number of Participants With Clinical Success and Failure at Follow-up (7-9 Days Post Therapy) for the Primary Efficacy Population | "Clinical Success" at follow-up was defined as "Resolution of clinically meaningful signs and symptoms of infection recorded at baseline including a pus/exudate Skin Infection Rating Scale (SIRS) score of "0". Clinical response at follow-up was classified as "Clinical Failure" for all other cases. The SIRS consists of seven items (pus/exudates, crusting, erythema/inflammation, tissue warmth, tissue edema, itching and pain). Each item has a score ranging from 0 to 6 (0=absent, 6=severe). The SIRS total score was calculated as the sum of the scores of all 7 SIRS items. | Days 12-14 | No |
Secondary | Number of Participants With Clinical Success and Failure at Follow-up (7-9 Days Post Therapy) for the Intent-to-Treat Bacteriology (ITTB) Subset of the Primary Efficacy Population | "Clinical Success" at follow-up was defined as "Resolution of clinically meaningful signs and symptoms of infection recorded at baseline including a pus/exudate Skin Infection Rating Scale (SIRS) score of "0". Clinical response at follow-up was classified as "Clinical Failure" for all other cases. The SIRS consists of seven items (pus/exudates, crusting, erythema/inflammation, tissue warmth, tissue edema, itching and pain). Each item has a score ranging from 0 to 6 (0=absent, 6=severe). The SIRS total score was calculated as the sum of the scores of all 7 SIRS items. | Days 12-14 | No |
Secondary | Number of Participants With Microbiological Success and Failure at Follow-up (7-9 Days Post Therapy) | The "by pathogen" microbiological outcome was determined by comparing the baseline culture results to those at follow-up. The "by subject" microbiological response was "Microbiological Success" if the microbiological outcomes for all baseline pathogens (bps) belong to "Eradication" (elimination of bps), "Presumed Eradication" (clinical outcome was success; no culture was obtained due to lack of culturable material), or "Colonization" (previously unidentified pathogen is identified at end of therapy in participant who is resolved/improved); otherwise, response was "Microbiological Failure". | Days 12-14 | No |
Secondary | Number of Participants With the Indicated Clinical Outcome at End of Therapy (2-4 Days Post Therapy) | Clinical outcome is determined by the investigator based on signs and symptoms (S/S) at the end of therapy evaluation. The 4 clincal outcome categories are: clinical success, resolution of clinically meaningful S/S of infection recorded at baseline (BL), including a pus/exudates score of 0; clinical improvement, improvement of S/S of infection recorded at BL to such an extent that no further antimicrobial therapy is necessary; clinical failure, insufficient improvement of deterioration of S/S of infection recorded at BL such that additional antibiotic therapy is required; unable to determine. | Days 7-9 | No |
Secondary | Number of Baseline Pathogens With the Indicated Microbiological Outcome at End of Therapy (2-4 Days Post Therapy) | The "by pathogen" microbiological outcome was determined by comparing the baseline culture results to those at follow-up. The results presented below pooled all baseline pathogens (bps). Eradication: elimination of bps. Presumed Eradication: clinical outcome was success; no culture was obtained due to lack of culturable material. Presumed Improvement: clinical outcome was improvement such that no culture was obtained due to lack of culturable material. Persistence: bps still present. Presumed persistence: clinical failure and no culture was obtained. | Days 7-9 | No |
Secondary | Number of Participants With Therapeutic Success and Failure at Follow-up (7-9 Days Post Therapy) | "Therapeutic Success (Succ)" was referred to as both "Clinical Succ" and "Microbiological (Micro) Succ" at Follow-up. "Clinical Succ" was the "Resolution of baseline signs/symptoms of infection with a pus score of "0." A participant was "Micro Succ" if the micro outcome for all baseline pathogens (bps) belonged to "Eradication" (elimination of bps), "Presumed Eradication" (clinical outcome is success; no culturable material), or "Colonization" (new pathogen is identified at end of therapy in participants who are resolved/improved). All other combinations were deemed "Therapeutic Failures." | Follow-up (Days 12-14) | No |
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