| Literature DB >> 16957911 |
Stephen Tyring1, Gary Richwald, Kamal Hamed.
Abstract
One common method for treating recurrent genital herpes outbreaks is 3-5 day episodic therapy with nucleoside analogues. However, since maximum viral replication occurs within 24 h after the onset of symptoms, short-term patient-initiated episodic therapy started at prodromal onset or at the first appearance of lesions in patients without a prodrome may represent an important option. In a recent randomized trial, single-day famciclovir treatment decreased lesion healing time and the duration of pain and other symptoms by approximately 2 days compared to placebo, and prevented progression to a full outbreak in almost one in four patients. Because single-day treatment is more convenient than traditional therapies, it may lead to improved patient compliance and better overall management of recurrent genital herpes outbreaks.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16957911 PMCID: PMC1705528 DOI: 10.1007/s00404-006-0234-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Gynecol Obstet ISSN: 0932-0067 Impact factor: 2.344
Effectiveness of oral antivirals in clinical trials of episodic treatment for genital herpes
| Drug | Treatment regimen | Median time (days) to lesion healing (treatment vs control) | Percent of aborted episodes (treatment vs control) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acyclovir [ | 800 mg tid × 2 days versus placebo | 4.0 versus 6.0 ( | 27.0 versus 10.6% ( |
| Valacyclovir [ | 500 mg bid × 3 days versus 500 mg bid × 5 days | 4.4 versus 4.7 ( | 25.4 versus 26.6% ( |
| Famciclovir [ | 1,000 mg bid × 1 day versus placebo | 4.3 versus 6.1 ( | 23.3 versus 12.7% ( |
aMean time to healing
bP values correspond to both valacyclovir versus placebo and acyclovir versus placebo
NS = Not significant