| Literature DB >> 28969659 |
Sunil Pokharel1, Buddha Basnyat2,3, Amit Arjyal1, Saruna Pathak Mahat1, Raj Kumar Kc1, Abhusani Bhuju1, Buddhi Poudyal4, Evelyne Kestelyn5,6, Ritu Shrestha1, Dung Nguyen Thi Phuong6, Rajkumar Thapa4, Manan Karki1, Sabina Dongol1, Abhilasha Karkey1, Marcel Wolbers5,6, Stephen Baker5,6, Guy Thwaites5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Undifferentiated febrile illness (UFI) includes typhoid and typhus fevers and generally designates fever without any localizing signs. UFI is a great therapeutic challenge in countries like Nepal because of the lack of available point-of-care, rapid diagnostic tests. Often patients are empirically treated as presumed enteric fever. Due to the development of high-level resistance to traditionally used fluoroquinolones against enteric fever, azithromycin is now commonly used to treat enteric fever/UFI. The re-emergence of susceptibility of Salmonella typhi to co-trimoxazole makes it a promising oral treatment for UFIs in general. We present a protocol of a randomized controlled trial of azithromycin versus co-trimoxazole for the treatment of UFI. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Azithromycin; Co-trimoxazole; Enteric fever; Fever clearance time; Undifferentiated febrile illness
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28969659 PMCID: PMC5625657 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2199-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Descriptive flow chart of study plan
Fig. 2Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) Figure: summary of enrollment, intervention and assessment. X Activities at hospital or home visits, Ω Activities that will be recorded over a telephone call, (X) Will be done only for culture-positive patients at day 0 or those with persistent fever/symptoms, X* Will be done retrospectively if blood culture shows no growth after 7 days
Power for the overall population, culture-negative patients and culture-positive patients based on the assumptions above
| Total sample size in both groups (culture-positive/-negative) | All patients (ITT): power for superiority of azithromycin | Culture-negative patients: power for superiority of azithromycin | Culture-positive patients: power for “non-inferiority” of azithromycina |
|---|---|---|---|
| 300 (150/150) | 80% | 89% | 96% |
| 300 (100/200) | 92% | 95% | 86% |
aProbability that the 95% confidence interval for the effect of azithromycin excludes the possibility that azithromycin is associated with a 1.5-fold slower fever clearance time (FCT) in culture-positive patients. ITT intention-to-treat
Doses formulation for equivalent tablets in two arms
| Tablet 1 | Tablet 2 | Tablet 3 | Tablet 4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Azithromycin 800-mg tablet | Azithromycin 400-mg tablet | Azithromycin 200-mg tablet | Azithromycin 100-mg tablet |
| Placebo tablet 1 | Placebo tablet 2 | Placebo tablet 3 | Placebo tablet 4 |
| Co-trimoxazole 1200-mg tablet | Co-trimoxazole 600-mg tablet | Co-trimoxazole 300-mg tablet | Co-trimoxazole 150-mg tablet |
Treatment allocations in each arm
| Azithromycin arm | Co-trimoxazole arm | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Odd dose | Even dose | Odd dose | Even dose |
| Azithromycin tablets | Placebo tablets | Co-trimoxazole tablet | Co-trimoxazole tablet |