| Literature DB >> 16700912 |
Sandra Y Silva1, Ligia C Rueda, Marcos López, Iván D Vélez, Christian F Rueda-Clausen, Daniel J Smith, Gerardo Muñoz, Hernando Mosquera, Federico A Silva, Adriana Buitrago, Holger Díaz, Patricio López-Jaramillo.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cutaneous Leishmaniasis is a worldwide disease, endemic in 88 countries, that has shown an increasing incidence over the last two decades. So far, pentavalent antimony compounds have been considered the treatment of choice, with a percentage of cure of about 85%. However, the high efficacy of these drugs is counteracted by their many disadvantages and adverse events. Previous studies have shown nitric oxide to be a potential alternative treatment when administered topically with no serious adverse events. However, due to the unstable nitric oxide release, the topical donors needed to be applied frequently, making the adherence to the treatment difficult. The electrospinning technique has allowed the production of a multilayer transdermal patch that produces a continuous and stable nitric oxide release. The main objective of this study is to evaluate this novel nitric oxide topical donor for the treatment of cutaneous leishmaniasis. METHODS ANDEntities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16700912 PMCID: PMC1524981 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-7-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Schedule of activities
| 0 | 1–20 | 21+3 | 45 ± 7 | 90 ± 14 | 180 ± 14 | ||
| Clinical History | X | X | X | X | X | X | |
| Physical Examination | X | X | X | X | X | X | |
| Inclusion/Exclusion criteria | X | ||||||
| Informed Consent | X | ||||||
| Direct test | X | ||||||
| Sampling of cultures | X | ||||||
| Laboratory tests | X | X | |||||
| Randomization | X | ||||||
| Treatment administration | X | X | |||||
| Clinical assessment of the lesion | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Measurement of ulcers | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| Photographic registration | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| Education of patients | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Handing over of diary | X | ||||||
| Evaluation of effectiveness | X | X | X | X | |||
| Documentation of adverse events | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Recording of concomitant medications | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Toxicity grading scale for determining the severity of clinical adverse events
| Fever: oral1 | 38 – 38.5°C | 38.6 – 39.5°C | 39.6 – 40.5°C | >40.5°C |
| Headache1 | Mild; no Rx required | Transient, moderate; Rx required | Severe; responds to initial narcotic Rx | Intractable; required repeated narcotic Rx |
| Allergic reaction1 | Pruritus without rash | Localized urticaria | Generalized urticaria; angioedema | Anaphylaxis |
| Nausea1 | Mild discomfort; maintains reasonable intake | Moderate discomfort; intake decreased significantly; some activity limited | Severe discomfort; no significant intake; activities limited | Minimal fluid intake |
| Vomiting2 | 1 episode in 24 hours | 2 – 5 episodes in 24 hours | > 6 episodes in 24 hours or needing IV fluids | Physiologic consequences requiring hospitalization or parenteral nutrition |
| Diarrhea2 | Mild or transient; 3–4 loose stools/day or mild diarrhea lasting < 1 week | Moderate or persistent; 5–7 loose stools/day or diarrhea lasting > 1 week. | >7 loose stools/day or bloody diarrhea; or orthostatic hypotension or electrolyte imbalance or >2 LIV fluids required | Hypotensive shock or physiologic consequences requiring hospitalization |
| Oral discomfort2 | Mild discomfort; no difficulty swallowing | Some limits on eating/drinking | Eating/talking very limited; unable to swallow solid food | Unable to drink fluids; requires IV fluids |
| Cardiac rhythm2 | ---- | Asymptomatic, transient signs, no Rx required | Recurrent/persistent symptomatic Rx required | Unstable dysrythmia; hospitalization and Rx required |
| Hypertension1 | Transient increase > 20 mmHg; no Rx | Recurrent, chronic > 20 mmHg, Rx required | Requires acute Rx; no hospitalization | Requires hospitalization |
| Hypotension1 | Transient orthostatic hypotension, no Rx | Symptoms corrected with oral fluids | Requires IV fluids; no hospitalization required | Requires hospitalization |
| Arthralgia2(joint pain) | Mild pain not interfering with function | Moderate pain, analgesics and/or pain interfering with function but not with ADL | Severe pain; pain and/or analgesics interfering with ADL | Disabling pain |
| Myalgia2 | Myalgia with no limitation of activity | Muscle tenderness (at other than injection 2site) or with moderate impairment of activity | Severe muscle tenderness with marked impairment of activity | Frank myonecrosis |
| Cough3 | Mild, relieved by non-prescription medication only | Symptomatic requiring narcotic prescription medication | Symptomatic and significantly interfering with sleep or ADL | NA |
| Dyspnea3 | Dyspnea on exertion, but can walk one flight of stairs without stopping | Dyspnea on exertion, but unable to walk 1 flight of stairs or 1 city block (0.1 Km) without stopping | Dyspnea interfering with ADL | Dyspnea at rest requiring oxygen therapy; intubation/ventilator indicated |
1 = WHO Toxicity Grading Scale; 2 = DMID, NIH, Adult Toxicity Table; 3 = CTCAE v3.0; *Report Grade 3 and Grade 4 adverse events to the investigators in charge.
ADL: Activities of daily living
Ref: Toxicity Grading based on CTCAE v3.0 DCTD, NCI, NIH, DHHS December 12, 2003 .
Toxicity grading scale for determining the severity of laboratory adverse events
| 5 – 40 U/L | >ULN – 2.5 × ULN | >2.5 – 5.0 × ULN | >5.0 – 20.0 × ULN | >20.0 × ULN | |
| 6 – 35 U/L | >ULN – 2.5 × ULN | >2.5 – 5.0 × ULN | >5.0 – 20.0 × ULN | >20.0 × ULN | |
| 0.7 – 1.5 mg/L | >ULN – 1.5 × ULN | >1.5 – 3.0 × ULN | >3.0 – 6.0 × ULN | >6.0 × ULN | |
| <120 U/L | >ULN – 1.5 × ULN | >1.5 – 2.0 × ULN | >2.0 – 5.0 × ULN | >5.0 × ULN | |
# Normal lab ranges may vary from time to time depending on the reagent/kit used at local lab. Every time the normal ranges change, the laboratory will fax a copy of the "normal ranges" for that date to the Investigators. To respect confidentiality, the subject's name will be covered.
* Grade 3 or 4 lab value: Suspend treatment.
ULN: Upper limit of normal range
Ref: Toxicity Grading based on CTCAE v3.0 DCTD, NCI, NIH, DHHS December 12, 2003 .