Literature DB >> 30020447

A Prospective, Open-label, Randomized Trial of Doxycycline Versus Azithromycin for the Treatment of Uncomplicated Murine Typhus.

Paul N Newton1,2, Valy Keolouangkhot3, Sue J Lee2,4, Khamla Choumlivong5, Siho Sisouphone3, Khamloune Choumlivong5, Manivanh Vongsouvath1, Mayfong Mayxay1,2,6, Vilada Chansamouth1, Viengmon Davong1, Koukeo Phommasone1, Joy Sirisouk1, Stuart D Blacksell1,2,4, Pruksa Nawtaisong1, Catrin E Moore1,2, Josée Castonguay-Vanier1, Sabine Dittrich1,2, Sayaphet Rattanavong1, Ko Chang3, Chirapha Darasavath3, Oudayvone Rattanavong3, Daniel H Paris2,4,7,8, Rattanaphone Phetsouvanh1,2,4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Murine typhus, or infection with Rickettsia typhi, is a global but neglected disease without randomized clinical trials to guide antibiotic therapy.
METHODS: A prospective, open, randomized trial was conducted in nonpregnant, consenting inpatient adults with rapid diagnostic test evidence of uncomplicated murine typhus at 2 hospitals in Vientiane, Laos. Patients were randomized to 7 days (D7) or 3 days (D3) of oral doxycycline or 3 days of oral azithromycin (A3). Primary outcome measures were fever clearance time and frequencies of treatment failure and relapse.
RESULTS: Between 2004 and 2009, the study enrolled 216 patients (72 per arm); 158 (73.2%) had serology/polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-confirmed murine typhus, and 52 (24.1%) were R. typhi PCR positive. The risk of treatment failure was greater for regimen A3 (22.5%; 16 of 71 patients) than for D3 (4.2%; 3 of 71) or D7 (1.4%; 1 of 71) (P < .001). Among R. typhi PCR-positive patients, the area under the time-temperature curve and the fever clearance time were significantly higher for A3 than for D3 (1.8- and 1.9-fold higher, respectively; P = .005) and D7 (1.5- and 1.6-fold higher; P = .02). No patients returned with PCR-confirmed R. typhi relapse.
CONCLUSION: In Lao adults, azithromycin is inferior to doxycycline as oral therapy for uncomplicated murine typhus. For doxycycline, 3- and 7-day regimens have similar efficacy. Azithromycin use in murine typhus should be reconsidered. Investigation of genomic and phenotypic markers of R. typhi azithromycin resistance is needed. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN47812566.
© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990 Rickettsia typhizzm321990 ; Laos; azithromycin; doxycycline; murine typhus

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30020447      PMCID: PMC6376095          DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciy563

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Infect Dis        ISSN: 1058-4838            Impact factor:   9.079


Murine typhus, caused by Rickettsia typhi, is a neglected global flea-borne disease with sparse worldwide data on epidemiology and no randomized clinical trials to guide therapy [1, 2]. Although most commonly a febrile illness with few localizing signs, it also causes severe disease, such as meningoencephalitis and pneumonitis [3]. The diagnosis of R. typhi infection is difficult, resembling many other causes of fever, but recent reports highlight its global importance [1-6]. R. typhi is in the same antigenic group as Rickettsia prowazekii, the cause of epidemic typhus and a more severe disease [6]. Tetracyclines are the mainstays of treatment, but there is minimal evidence on optimal duration or how to treat in pregnancy, childhood, or severe disease [1, 2, 4, 6, 7]. A 5–10-day chloramphenicol course or a single 200-mg oral doxycycline dose resulted in defervescence within 2 days in about 70% of Thai patients with murine typhus [8]. A review of Cretan patients with murine typhus suggested that doxycycline was associated with a shorter fever clearance time (FCT) than chloramphenicol or fluoroquinolones [9]. The clinical efficacy of fluoroquinolones is in doubt [10-12], with equivocal evidence for azithromycin [13, 14]. R. typhi antibiotic susceptibility testing cannot be assessed by conventional techniques. The few genotypic and phenotypic susceptibility data available suggest that R. typhi is susceptible to tetracyclines, chloramphenicol, azithromycin, erythromycin, clarithromycin, and fluoroquinolones and resistant to amoxicillin, cotrimoxazole, and gentamicin [6, 7, 15–17]. Resistance to rifampin has been described, associated with rpoB gene point mutations [18]. Azithromycin has been shown to be efficacious by means of in vitro assays against diverse Rickettsia species [19]. We therefore conducted a randomized open-label clinical trial to provide evidence for the optimum duration of treatment of murine typhus in Laos and to test azithromycin as an alternative therapy.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

Study Design

An open, randomized, superiority trial was performed in adults with rapid diagnostic test (RDT) evidence of infection with uncomplicated murine typhus, to compare the therapeutic efficacy of 3 oral treatment regimens: 7 days of doxycycline (D7), 3 days of doxycycline (D3), and 3 days of azithromycin (A3). The study was conducted at 2 primary-tertiary care hospitals in Vientiane: Mahosot Hospital (400 beds) and Sethathirat Hospital (200 beds). Ethical clearance was granted by the Ethical Review Committee of the Faculty of Medical Sciences, National University of Laos, Vientiane, and the Oxford Tropical Research Ethics Committee in the United Kingdom. Eligible participants admitted to the infectious disease wards at both hospitals were screened and enrolled by study physicians. Nonpregnant adults (aged ≥15 years) admitted with suspected uncomplicated typhus were included in the study providing they had a positive anti–R. typhi immunoglobulin M (IgM) result, were able to take oral medication, gave written informed consent, and had a high likelihood of remaining in the hospital for the duration of treatment and completing ≥4 weeks of follow-up. A negative urinary pregnancy test was required for women of childbearing age. Exclusion criteria included known administration of chloramphenicol, doxycycline, tetracycline, fluoroquinolones, or azithromycin during the week before admission; pregnancy or breastfeeding; and hypersensitivity or contraindications to doxycycline (severe hepatic impairment, known systemic lupus erythematosus) or azithromycin (severe hepatic impairment). Patients were also excluded if they had evidence of another cause of fever or severe disease, defined as ≥1 of the following: reduced level of consciousness, jaundice, systolic blood pressure <80 mm Hg, vomiting, respiratory distress (respirations, >30/min), or any other syndrome that in the opinion of the admitting physician constituted severe typhus. Patients were not involved in the design of this trial. (Clinical trial registration: ISRCTN47812566.)

Randomization

Patients were randomized to 3 groups: (1) D7, doxycycline with a 200-mg loading dose, followed by 100 mg every 12 hours for 7 days; (2) D3, doxycycline with a 200-mg loading dose, followed by 100 mg every 12 hours for 3 days; or (3) A3, azithromycin with a 500-mg loading dose, followed by 250 mg every 24 hours for 2 days. The drugs used were doxycycline hyclate (Vibramycin, 100-mg film-coated tablets; Pfizer) and azithromycin dihydrate (Zithromax, 250-mg capsules; Pfizer). Randomization, in blocks of 12, was computer generated by an investigator not involved in patient recruitment. Treatment allocations were kept in sealed opaque envelopes and opened, by recruiting study physicians, when all inclusion and exclusion criteria were checked and consent forms signed. Paracetamol was given for fever as needed by the patient and antacids avoided. The ingestion of all study drugs was witnessed by the ward nursing staff. If a patient vomited within 1 hour after drug ingestion, the full dose was repeated.

Procedures

All consenting patients with a history of fever and suspected typhus had venous blood taken and aliquoted for serum (3 mL) and whole blood in ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) (5 mL) for a full blood count (Abx Micros 60; Abx Hematologie) and 2 blood cultures (5 mL in a 50-mL blood culture bottle) that were incubated in air at 37°C for 7 days (Table 1). Bacteria isolated from blood cultures were identified using standard biochemical tests and specific antisera. If the patient came from an area with endemic malaria, Giemsa-stained malaria thick and thin films were examined.
Table 1.

Clinical and Laboratory Features of Patients Recruited to Murine Typhus Clinical Trial

VariableaAll Patients Rickettsia typhi Positive
Serology and/or PCRPCR
Patients, No. (%)216 (100)158 (73.2)b52 (24.2)c
Age, median (IQR), y30 (22–41)30 (21–42)39 (22–47)
Female sex, No. (%)91 (42.1)61 (38.6)20 (38.5)
Duration of illness, median (IQR), d8 (7–10)8 (7–10)8 (7–10)
Symptoms, No. (%)
 Headache204/215d (94.9)152/157 (96.8)51 (98.1)
 Myalgia164 (75.9)122 (77.2)45 (86.5)
 Abdominal pain15/215 (7.0)12/157 (7.6)6 (11.5)
 Nausea63 (29.2)48 (30.4)16 (30.8)
 Vomiting60 (27.8)45 (28.5)16 (30.8)
 Diarrhea58 (26.9)44 (27.9)21 (40.4)
 Cough97 (44.9)69 (43.7)24 (46.2)
 Lymphadenopathy28/215 (13.0)21/157 (13.4)9 (17.3)
 Rash41 (19.0)31 (19.6)14 (26.9)
 Liver palpable19 (8.8)12 (7.6)4 (7.7)
 Spleen palpable13 (6.0)10 (6.3)4 (7.7)
Tympanic temperature, mean (95% CI), °C38.5 (38.4–38.7)38.6 (38.4–38.7)38.7 (38.5–38.9)
Pulse rate, median (IQR), pulses/min98 (88–100) (n = 215)d98 (88–100) (n = 157)100 (89–100)
Systolic BP, median (IQR), mm Hg100 (100–120)100 (100–120)100 (95–120)
Diastolic BP, median (IQR), mm Hg70 (60–80)70 (60–80)70 (60–80)
Respiratory rate, mean (95% CI), respirations/min22.3 (21.5–23.0) (n = 213)22.3 (21.3–23.4) (n = 155)22.4 (21.4–23.4)
Body weight, mean (95% CI), kg54.6 (53.2–55.9)55.7 (54.1–57.2)57.4 (54.5–60.3)
Hematocrit, mean (95% CI), %40.6 (39.9–41.4) (n = 215)40.7 (39.8–41.7) (n = 157)40.1 (38.6–41.6) (n = 51)
WBC count, median (IQR), 109/L8.3 (6.4–10.3) (n = 214)7.9 (6.4–9.9) (n = 156)7.8 (5.8–9.9) (n = 51)
Neutrophils, mean (95% CI), %64.8 (63.2–66.4) (n = 215)64.3 (62.7–65.9) (n = 157)66.0 (63.0–69.0) (n = 51)
Platelet count, mean (95% CI), 109/L192 (185–199) (n = 213)191 (183–200) (n = 155)187 (169–205) (n = 51)
Serum CRP, median (IQR), mg/L37.6 (18.5–83.3) (n = 197)34.9 (18.5–76.0) (n = 147)66.9 (21.9–111.9) (n = 49)
Serum creatinine, median (IQR), μmol/L97 (80–106) (n = 205)97 (80–106) (n = 153)97 (80–115)
Serum AST, median (IQR), IU/L91 (50–165) (n = 200)101 (58–167) (n = 149)141 (84–187) (n = 49)
Serum ALT, median (IQR), IU/L33 (18–61) (n = 197)36 (22–69) (n = 147)42 (27–71) (n = 49)
Serum albumin, median (IQR), g/L3.6 (3.2–4.0) (n = 202)3.6 (3.2–4.0) (n = 151)3.2 (2.8–3.6) (n = 51)
Serum alkaline phosphatase, median (IQR), IU/L105 (74–168) (n = 199)119 (77–182) (n = 149)168 (96–260) (n = 49)
Serum total bilirubin, median (IQR), μmol/L5.1 (5.1–8.6) (n = 198)5.1 (5.1–8.6) (n = 147)6.8 (5.1–13.7) (n = 49)

Abbreviations: ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BP, blood pressure; CRP, C-reactive protein; IQR, interquartile range; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; WBC, white blood cell.

aReference ranges for laboratory values were as follows: WBC count, 4.0–11.0 109/L; platelet count, 150–400 109/L; serum CRP, <10 mg/L; serum creatinine, 53–123 μmol/L; serum AST, 7–40 IU/L; serum ALT, 7–40 IU/L; serum albumin, 3.5–5.0 g/L; serum alkaline phosphatase 24–190 IU/L; and serum total bilirubin, 1.7–20 μmol/L.

bA total of 163 patients had serologic or PCR evidence of R. typhi infection, but 5 had PCR/culture evidence of another pathogen (Escherichia coli, Salmonella Typhi, Leptospira spp. in 1 each and Orientia tsutsugamushi in 2). They may have had concurrent dual infections, but we have opted to be conservative and not included these 5 patients, giving a denominator of 158 patients

cA total of 53 patients had PCR evidence of R. typhi infection, but 1 patient was also PCR positive for Leptospira spp., with an apparent dual concurrent infection, and is thus excluded from this column.

dDenominators are provided for variables with missing values.

Clinical and Laboratory Features of Patients Recruited to Murine Typhus Clinical Trial Abbreviations: ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BP, blood pressure; CRP, C-reactive protein; IQR, interquartile range; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; WBC, white blood cell. aReference ranges for laboratory values were as follows: WBC count, 4.0–11.0 109/L; platelet count, 150–400 109/L; serum CRP, <10 mg/L; serum creatinine, 53–123 μmol/L; serum AST, 7–40 IU/L; serum ALT, 7–40 IU/L; serum albumin, 3.5–5.0 g/L; serum alkaline phosphatase 24–190 IU/L; and serum total bilirubin, 1.7–20 μmol/L. bA total of 163 patients had serologic or PCR evidence of R. typhi infection, but 5 had PCR/culture evidence of another pathogen (Escherichia coli, Salmonella Typhi, Leptospira spp. in 1 each and Orientia tsutsugamushi in 2). They may have had concurrent dual infections, but we have opted to be conservative and not included these 5 patients, giving a denominator of 158 patients cA total of 53 patients had PCR evidence of R. typhi infection, but 1 patient was also PCR positive for Leptospira spp., with an apparent dual concurrent infection, and is thus excluded from this column. dDenominators are provided for variables with missing values. Samples were stored at −80°C until analysis and transported on dry ice. IgM antibodies to murine typhus were screened by the Dip-S-Ticks Murine typhus (D-RTY03T, PanBio, now GenBio, adapted by detecting IgM). These have a sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing murine typhus of 61% and 87%, respectively, compared with indirect immunofluorescence assays (IFAs) [20]. IgM and immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies against R. typhi were detected using IFA after the study was completed, using slides coated with R. typhi Wilmington antigen (Australian Rickettsial Reference Laboratory). Patient serum samples were serially 2-fold diluted from 1:400 to 1:3200, and the end point was determined as the highest titer displaying specific fluorescence. Positivity was defined as (1) ≥4-fold rising titer in IgM or IgG antibodies when comparing admission with subsequent longitudinal samples and/or (2) a positive reciprocal titer of ≥3200 in an admission sample. EDTA buffy coat samples underwent genomic DNA extraction using the QIAmp DNA Mini Kit (Qiagen), followed by detection of the 47-kDa htrA gene of Orientia tsutsugamushi, 17-kDa gene of Rickettsia spp., and the rrs gene of Leptospira spp. (see Supplementary Material for details). Patients’ admission clinical history and examination were recorded using standard questionnaires and reviewed daily. Tympanic temperature was recorded every 6 hours, using tympanic thermometers (Genius; Tyco Healthcare). For those Mahosot Hospital patients who consented, follow-up was conducted on days 14 and 28 and at 3, 6, and 12 months, with repeated venous blood collection. Patients were encouraged to return if they felt unwell within the year after discharge.

Outcomes

The primary outcome measures were FCT, and frequencies of treatment failure and confirmed relapse with, as secondary outcome, area under the time-temperature curve (AUC). FCT was defined as the time, from onset of treatment, to the first time tympanic temperature dropped below 37.5°C, after a rise to ≥37.5°C, and remained at ≤37.5°C for 24 hours. FCT spanned primary and rescue therapy for those with treatment failure, which was defined as fever >37.5°C after ≥72 hours of the assigned treatment without clinical improvement or with development of severe disease. Patients in whom first-line treatments failed were treated with 7 days doxycycline (100 mg every 12 hours with loading dose, as described above). Detailed clinical history, examination, and investigations were performed to determine the cause of fever in those with apparent “relapse.” Confirmed relapse was defined as a patient presenting again with fever and R. typhi buffy coat polymerase chain reaction (PCR) positivity because it was not possible to reliably clinically distinguish R. typhi relapse from other causes of fever, and serology responses in R. typhi relapse are not known.

Statistical Analysis

Without local data on murine typhus FCT and treatment failure, sample size calculations were performed at interim analysis after 51 patients; there were no failures in the D7 group (0 of 18 patients), a 12.5% failure rate (2 of 16 patients) in the D3 group, and a 29.4% failure rate (5 of 17) in the A3 group. To detect a significant difference in the proportion of failures between the reference group (using 0.1%) and the D3 group, a sample size of 67 per group provided 80% power and an α value of .05, with sufficient power to detect a difference between the D7 and A3 groups as well. To account for potential patient withdrawal, 72 patients per group were recruited (n = 216 total). Outcomes were compared across the 3 treatment groups and also by subgroups: serology- or PCR-confirmed R. typhi (single infection) and PCR-confirmed R. typhi. We regarded PCR positivity as a method with higher specificity to diagnose R. typhi than serology. Frequencies were reported as numbers and percentages and analyzed using χ2 test. Risks were quantified using logistic regression and treatment allocation as a categorical covariate, with D7 serving as the referent group. Median FCTs were estimated using survival analysis and plotted using Kaplan-Meier curves. The survival functions were compared using the log-rank test. AUC was calculated using the trapezoid rule to the time when temperature dropped below 37.5°C and stayed at ≤37.5°C for ≥24 hours. For patients whose fever did not clear, the time of discharge was used. Patients who were afebrile (and stayed afebrile) at admission were excluded from the AUC analysis. AUCs were compared between the 3 treatment groups using the Kruskal-Wallis test. Analysis was performed using Stata software (version 14.2; StataCorp).

RESULTS

Between 21 March 2004 and 13 August 2009, a total of 2313 and 265 inpatients at Mahosot and Sethathirat Hospitals, respectively, were screened using anti–R. typhi IgM RDTs; 480 had murine typhus diagnosed, 416 (87%) at Mahosot Hospital and 64 (13%) at Sethathirat (Figure 1). Two hundred sixteen patients (45%; 72 patients in each treatment group) were recruited into the trial (180 at Mahosot, 36 at Sethathirat Hospital); 91 (42%) were female, with a median age of 30 years (interquartile range [IQR], 22–41 years) (Table 1). The main reasons for exclusion (n = 264) were that patients were unlikely to be able to stay on the ward for 7 days and/or complete follow-up (95 patients; 36.0%), had severe disease (50; 18.9%), had taken antirickettsial antibiotics (31; 11.7%), were not admitted to the study wards (27; 10.2%), declined consent (23; 8.7%), or were pregnant or breastfeeding (11; 4.2%) (Figure 1). Three patients, 1 in each treatment group, withdrew.
Figure 1.

Flowchart of the clinical trial. Patients were excluded (n = 264) because they were unlikely to be able to stay on the ward for 7 days and/or complete follow-up (95 patients; 36.0%), had severe disease (50; 18.9%), had taken antirickettsial antibiotics (31; 11.7%), were not admitted to the study wards (27; 10.2%), declined consent (23; 8.7%), were pregnant or breastfeeding (11; 4.2%), were children (10; 3.8%), or had an alternative confirmed diagnosis before being approached for consent (8; 3.0%); 6 patients (2.3%) were excluded for unrecorded reasons, and 3 (1.1%) withdrew from the study. The confirmed totals included those without culture or polymerase chain reaction evidence of dual pathogens.

Flowchart of the clinical trial. Patients were excluded (n = 264) because they were unlikely to be able to stay on the ward for 7 days and/or complete follow-up (95 patients; 36.0%), had severe disease (50; 18.9%), had taken antirickettsial antibiotics (31; 11.7%), were not admitted to the study wards (27; 10.2%), declined consent (23; 8.7%), were pregnant or breastfeeding (11; 4.2%), were children (10; 3.8%), or had an alternative confirmed diagnosis before being approached for consent (8; 3.0%); 6 patients (2.3%) were excluded for unrecorded reasons, and 3 (1.1%) withdrew from the study. The confirmed totals included those without culture or polymerase chain reaction evidence of dual pathogens. Patients were recruited in all months, with peaks in May–June (Figure 2). The trial ended when the target of 216 patients was enrolled. Most patients lived in Vientiane City (199 patients; 92%) and Vientiane Province (15; 6.9%). The most common occupations were student (50 patients; 23.1%), trader (38; 17.6%), construction worker (20; 9.3%), and government official (19; 8.8%). Of 204 patients with data, 91 (45%) stated that they had taken antibiotics in the week before admission; none had taken an antibiotic known to be active against R. typhi.
Figure 2.

Monthly recruitment of patients by admission month. Abbreviations: Aug, August; Dec, December; Feb, February; Jan, January; Nov, November; Oct, October; Sep, September.

Monthly recruitment of patients by admission month. Abbreviations: Aug, August; Dec, December; Feb, February; Jan, January; Nov, November; Oct, October; Sep, September. Of the 216 patients, 158 (73.2%) had murine typhus confirmed by IFA and/or PCR, without evidence of dual infections, including 52 of 216 (24.1%) with PCR lone-infection evidence of R. typhi. The median (IQR) bacterial load in 45 R. typhi PCR–positive patients was 3 (2–6) copies/μL whole blood (Tables 2 and 3).
Table 2.

Pathogen Identification for the 175 Patients of 216 With Laboratory Diagnoses, Recruited to a Murine Typhus Clinical Trial

PathogenPatients, No.
TotalCulturePCRSerology
Rickettsia typhi 158a,bNA53a155b
Orientia tsutsugamushi 7NA64
Salmonella enterica Typhic55NANA
Leptospira spp.4NA4aNA
Escherichia coli c 11NANA
Salmonella enterica Paratyphi Ac11NANA

Abbreviations: NA, not applicable; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.

aOne patient was PCR positive for both R. typhi and Leptospira sp.

bA total of 160 patients had serologic evidence of R. typhi infection, but 5 had PCR/culture evidence of another pathogen (E. coli, Salmonella Typhi, and Leptospira sp. in 1 each and O. tsutsugamushi in 2). They may have had concurrent dual infections, but we have opted to be conservative and not included these 5 patients, giving a denominator of 155 patients.

cBlood culture and bacterial identification as described by Phetsouvanh et al [21].

Table 3.

Details of Patients Recruited to the 3 Treatment Groupsa

VariableDoxycycline (7 d) (n = 72)Doxycycline (3 d) (n = 72)Azithromycin (3 d) (n = 72)All Patients (n = 216)
Clinical and laboratory features
 Age, median (IQR), y28.5 (21–43)29.0 (21–40)31.5 (24–42)30 (22–41)
 Female sex, No. (%)33 (45.8)30 (41.7)28 (38.9)91 (42.1)
 Duration of illness, median (IQR), d8 (7–10)9 (7–10)8 (7–10)8 (7–10)
 Fever ≥37.5°C at admission, No. (%)61 (84.7)64 (88.9)68 (94.4)193 (89.4)
 Admission tympanic temperature, mean (95% CI), °C38.6 (38.3–38.8)38.4 (38.2–38.6)38.6 (38.4–38.8)38.5 (38.4–38.7)
 PCR- or serology-confirmed Rickettsia typhi , No. (%)b55 (76.4)54 (75.0)49 (68.1)158 (73.2)
 Serology-confirmed R. typhi, No. (%)53/70c (75.7)56/72 (77.8)51/70 (72.9)160/212 (75.5)
 PCR-confirmed R. typhi, No. (%)b20/71 (28.2)18/69 (26.1)15/71 (21.1)53/211 (25.1)
 No PCR or serologic evidence of R. typhi, No. (%)17 (23.6)18 (25.0)23 (31.9)58 (26.9)
R. typhi bacteremia, median (IQR), copies/μL whole blood3 (2–6) (n = 17)c3 (2–4) (n = 15)3 (2–4) (n = 13)3 (2–6) (n = 45)
 PCR- or serology-confirmed O. tsutsugamushi, No. (%)0/695/69 (7.3)2/69 (2.9)7/207 (3.4)
  PCR-confirmed O. tsutsugamushi, No. (%)0/714/69 (5.8)2/71 (2.8)6/211 (2.8)
 Other confirmed diagnoses, No. (%)6/72 (8.3)2/72 (2.8)3/72 (4.2)11/216 (5.1)
 No diagnosis made, No. (%)12/72 (16.7)11/72 (15.3)18/72 (25.0)41/216 (19.0)
 CRP, median (IQR), mg/L40.8 (22.8–94.5) (n = 66)c34.2 (14.0–95.2) (n = 63)35.7 (19.0–59.4) (n = 68)37.6 (18.5–83.3) (n = 197)
Antibiotic dosages
 Total doxycycline doses administered, median (range), No.d15 (2–17)7 (4–21)0 (0–15)
 Total duration of doxycycline treatment, median (range), dd7 (1–8)3.5 (2–10)0 (0–7)
 Doxycycline dosage, mean (95% CI), mg/kg body weight dose per 100-mg dose1.83 (1.75–1.92)1.83 (1.76- 1.91)1.84 (1.77–1.92) (n = 14)c
 Total doxycycline dose, mean (95% CI), mg/kg body weightd27.5 (26.0–29.0)14.0 (13.1–15.0)4.5 (2.3–6.7)
 Total azithromycin doses administered, median (range), No.004 (4–4)
 Total duration of azithromycin treatment, median (range), d003 (3–3)
 Azithromycin dosage, mean (95% CI), mg/kg body weight dose per 250-mg dose004.60 (4.42–4.79)
 Total azithromycin dose, mean (95% CI), mg/kg body weight18.9 (18.1–19.6)
Outcome
 Patients withdrawing, No. (%)1/72 (1.4)1/72 (1.4)1/72 (1.4)3/216 (1.4)
 Patients vomiting loading dose within 1 h, No. (%)5/66 (7.6)5/64 (7.8)2/62 (3.2)12/192 (6.3)
 Patients with mild adverse events, excluding headache, No. (%)e26/36 (72)17/37 (46)16/30 (53)59/103 (57)
 Duration of patient follow-up, median (range), d190 (2–666)319 (4–411)224 (2–420)208 (2–666)
 Patients returning with fever after admission, No. (%)7 (9.7)9 (12.5)10 (13.9)26 (12.0)

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CRP, C-reactive protein; IQR, interquartile range; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.

aAntibiotic batch numbers were as follows: Vibramycin (Pfizer), 0658105B, 0558103B, 0758103C, 0558103D, 0558101C, and 0458102B; Zithromax (Pfizer), 914640271, 814360231, 614646251, 616046261, 516645351, 714641322, 514645351, 214642178, 514665081, 014640091, and 516645351.

bWithout culture or PCR evidence of dual pathogens.

cDenominators are provided for variables with missing values.

dIncluding doxycycline given to those with treatment failure.

eMahosot Hospital patients only.

Of 160 patients (74.1%) with IgM/IgG serologic evidence of R. typhi infection, 5 had PCR/culture evidence of another pathogen (Escherichia coli, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, and Leptospira sp. in 1 each and O. tsutsugamushi in 2) (Tables 2 and 3). These patients may have had concurrent genuine dual infections and were not included in the analysis. Pathogens were identified by PCR for 62 patients (28.7%): 53 with R. typhi, 6 with O. tsutsugamushi, and 4 with Leptospira spp. One patient was PCR positive for both R. typhi and Leptospira sp. Another 5 patients without IFA IgM and IgG evidence of R. typhi were blood culture positive (4 with Salmonella Typhi and 1 with Salmonella Paratyphi A) (Table 2). At examination, 3 patients (1.3%) had eschars; all were PCR positive for O. tsutsugamushi. Malaria films obtained in 183 patients (85%) were negative. Three patients with positive anti–R. typhi IgM RDT and R. typhi PCR results had negative R. typhi IgM and IgG IFA results (see Patients and Methods). Pathogen Identification for the 175 Patients of 216 With Laboratory Diagnoses, Recruited to a Murine Typhus Clinical Trial Abbreviations: NA, not applicable; PCR, polymerase chain reaction. aOne patient was PCR positive for both R. typhi and Leptospira sp. bA total of 160 patients had serologic evidence of R. typhi infection, but 5 had PCR/culture evidence of another pathogen (E. coli, Salmonella Typhi, and Leptospira sp. in 1 each and O. tsutsugamushi in 2). They may have had concurrent dual infections, but we have opted to be conservative and not included these 5 patients, giving a denominator of 155 patients. cBlood culture and bacterial identification as described by Phetsouvanh et al [21]. Seventy-two patients were randomly assigned to each of the 3 treatment groups (Table 3 and Figure 1). Of the 158 patients with confirmed single-pathogen murine typhus infection, 55 (34.8%), 54 (34.2%), and 49 (31.0%) were included in the D7, D3, and A3 groups, respectively. Details of Patients Recruited to the 3 Treatment Groupsa Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CRP, C-reactive protein; IQR, interquartile range; PCR, polymerase chain reaction. aAntibiotic batch numbers were as follows: Vibramycin (Pfizer), 0658105B, 0558103B, 0758103C, 0558103D, 0558101C, and 0458102B; Zithromax (Pfizer), 914640271, 814360231, 614646251, 616046261, 516645351, 714641322, 514645351, 214642178, 514665081, 014640091, and 516645351. bWithout culture or PCR evidence of dual pathogens. cDenominators are provided for variables with missing values. dIncluding doxycycline given to those with treatment failure. eMahosot Hospital patients only. The mean total doxycycline doses were 27.5 (95% CI, 26.0–29.0) and 14.0 (13.1–15.0) mg/kg body weight for D7 and D3 patients, respectively. For the A3 group, the mean total azithromycin dose was 18.9 (95% CI, 18.1–19.6) mg/kg (Table 3). There were 17 protocol violations and 3 patients withdrew, not allowing classification for treatment failure (Figure 1 and Supplementary Material). Twelve of 192 patients (6.3%) with data vomited within 1 hour of the loading dose, 3.2% (2 of 62) in the A3 group and 7.7% (10 of 130) in the D7 and D3 groups combined (P = .34). All patients survived to discharge. The median duration of hospital admission was 8 days (IQR, 7–10 days; range, 2–90 days). Treatment failed in 20 (9.4%) of 213 patients (3 withdrew); 1 of 71 (1.4%) in the D7 group, 3 of 71 (4.2%) in the D3 group, and 16 of 71 (22.5%) in the A3 group (P < .001; Table 4). The risk of treatment failure (Table 4 and Supplementary Material) was also significantly higher in the A3 group than in the D7 and D3 groups when only those with molecular and/or serologically confirmed R. typhi (P = .001; n = 157) and those PCR positive for R. typhi (P = .002; n = 51) were considered. Those who failed treatment did not have only raised temperature but were also clinically unwell; none developed severe disease (Supplementary Material). The number of patients who cleared fever by 72 hours was also significantly lower in the A3 group for all patients (P = .001) and those R. typhi PCR and/or serology positive (P = .001). The median (IQR) FCT was significantly longer in the A3 group, at 48 (IQR, 24–96) hours, compared with 34 (24–58) hours for the D7 and 36 (24–51) hours for the D3 group (P = .002) (Table 4 and Figures 3–5).
Table 4.

Outcome Measures in the Patients Recruited to a Murine Typhus Clinical Trial

Outcome MeasureAllDoxycycline (7 d)Doxycycline (3 d)Azithromycin (3 d)P Valuea
Treatment failure, No. (%)b
 All patients20/213 (9.4)1/71 (1.4)3/71 (4.2)16/71 (22.5)<.001
 PCR- or serology-confirmed Rickettsia typhi11/157 (7.0)0/542/54 (3.7)9/49 (18.4)<.001
 PCR-confirmed R. typhi7/51 (13.7)0/181/18 (5.6)6/15 (40.0).002
 No PCR or confirmed serologic evidence of R. typhi9/56 (16.1)1/17 (5.88)1/17 (5.88)7/22 (31.8).06
Cleared fever, No. (%)c
 All patients185/203 (91.1)69/70 (98.6)60/64 (93.8)56/69 (81.2)<.001
 PCR- or serology-confirmed R. typhi136/146 (93.2)53/53 (100)45/47 (95.7)38/46 (82.6)<.001
 PCR-confirmed R. typhi47/49 (95.9)17/17 (100)18/18 (100)12/14 (85.7).08
 No PCR or confirmed serologic evidence of R. typhi49/57 (86.0)16/17 (94.1)15/17 (88.2)18/23 (78.3).41
FCT, median (IQR), hc
 All patients37 (24–66)34 (24–58)36 (24–51)48 (24–96).002
 PCR- or serology-confirmed R. typhi36 (24–60)32 (24–48)36 (24–60)43 (20–107).02
 PCR-confirmed R. typhi48 (30–66)42 (30–60)34 (24–60)66 (48–162).005
 No PCR or confirmed serologic evidence of R. typhi42 (24–78)36 (24–68)30 (24–50)70 (24–100).07
AUC,d median (IQR), °C * h
 All1368 (891–2259)1243 (891–2016)1312 (792–1923)1639 (892–2648).056
 PCR- or serology-confirmed R. typhi1370 (895–2249)1211 (903–1834)1356 (681–2233)1616 (743–2448).26
 PCR-confirmed R. typhi1827 (1130–2465)1591 (1126–2247)1312 (920–2267)2360 (1827–4719).02
 No PCR or confirmed serologic evidence of R. typhi1363 (891–2499)1346 (455–2186)1117 (911–1634)1845 (892–3045).20

Abbreviations: AUC, area under the time-temperature curve; FCT, fever clearance time; IQR, interquartile range; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.

aFrequencies were compared using χ2 tests across 3 groups (ie, 2 degrees of freedom), clearance times were compared using log-rank tests, and AUC estimates were compared using Kruskal-Wallis tests.

bTreatment failure was assessed in 213 patients; 3 patients withdrew, 1 in each arm, before treatment failure/success could be defined.

cOf 203 patients who presented with or developed fever, fever did not clear before discharge (or withdrawal) in 18; excluded are 12 patients who were afebrile at admission and 1 who withdrew at hour 0.

dAUC for period up to FCT or last patient follow up, if fever not cleared (excluding 12 patients with no fever at admission and 1 who withdrew at hour 0). AUCs for 4 patients afebrile at admission who developed fever during follow-up were calculated from the time of first temperature ≥37.5°C.

Figure 3.

Kaplan-Meier plot of fever clearance for all patients who presented with or developed fever (n = 203).

Outcome Measures in the Patients Recruited to a Murine Typhus Clinical Trial Abbreviations: AUC, area under the time-temperature curve; FCT, fever clearance time; IQR, interquartile range; PCR, polymerase chain reaction. aFrequencies were compared using χ2 tests across 3 groups (ie, 2 degrees of freedom), clearance times were compared using log-rank tests, and AUC estimates were compared using Kruskal-Wallis tests. bTreatment failure was assessed in 213 patients; 3 patients withdrew, 1 in each arm, before treatment failure/success could be defined. cOf 203 patients who presented with or developed fever, fever did not clear before discharge (or withdrawal) in 18; excluded are 12 patients who were afebrile at admission and 1 who withdrew at hour 0. dAUC for period up to FCT or last patient follow up, if fever not cleared (excluding 12 patients with no fever at admission and 1 who withdrew at hour 0). AUCs for 4 patients afebrile at admission who developed fever during follow-up were calculated from the time of first temperature ≥37.5°C. Kaplan-Meier plot of fever clearance for all patients who presented with or developed fever (n = 203). Kaplan-Meier plot of fever clearance for patients with serology- or polymerase chain reaction (PCR)–confirmed murine typhus (n = 146). Kaplan-Meier plot of fever clearance for patients with polymerase chain reaction (PCR)–confirmed murine typhus only (n = 49). The time-temperature AUC and FCT were also significantly larger and longer, respectively, for patients in the A3 group with PCR-confirmed R. typhi (P = .02). Kaplan-Meier analysis demonstrated longer FCT for the A3 than for the D7 and D3 groups (Figures 3–5; log-rank P < .02 for all diagnostic groups). There were no significant differences between D3 and D7 groups for any of the outcomes (all P ≥ .20) and no significance difference in the risk of failure between younger (≤40 years) and older (>40 years) patients (P = .11). Of the 103 patients with adverse event data at Mahosot Hospital, 59 (57%) had mild adverse events, excluding headache, which was a consistent feature of murine typhus (rash occurred in 15 of 93 [16.1%], diarrhea in 14 of 84 [16.7%], vomiting in 12 of 89 [13.5%]), with no significant difference between the 3 treatment groups (P = .06). The median (IQR, range) duration of follow-up was 208 days (IQR, 165–369 days; range, 2–666 days) with 99 (55%) of the Mahosot Hospital patients completing 1 year. Twenty-six patients (12.0%) returned with fever (Supplementary Material); none were thought clinically to have murine typhus relapse. Of 14 patients with repeated R. typhi PCR performed on readmission buffy coats all were negative. All returning patients recovered without antirickettsial antibiotic therapy and were well at discharge.

DISCUSSION

The results of this trial suggest that azithromycin is inferior to doxycycline as oral therapy for uncomplicated murine typhus. The clinical outcome measures of FCT, AUC, and frequency of treatment failure were significantly and consistently inferior for the azithromycin group compared with the doxycycline groups. Although the D3 group had longer FCTs, higher treatment failure frequency, and larger AUC than the D7 group, there were no significant differences (P ≥ .05) (Table 4), suggesting that 3 days of doxycycline is adequate for treating uncomplicated murine typhus in Lao adults. Owing to our limited understanding of the geographic genomic, antimicrobial resistance variability of and human susceptibility to R. typhi, this conclusion can be generalized only with caution. These data have implications for the use of azithromycin in the empirical treatment of fever in communities where murine typhus is common [22]. There have been concerns that murine typhus may relapse, especially after early brief chloramphenicol therapy [23, 24], perhaps because of treatment discontinuation before development of an effective immune response. In Laos we found no evidence of relapse, but active, rather than passive, long-term patient follow-up is required. Epidemic typhus is known to relapse, as Brill-Zinsser disease, but the interval between an initial attack of epidemic typhus and relapse is measured in years and not months [25]. Limitations of the current trial include the fact that we did not assay the quality of the study antibiotics before or during the trial, but they were manufactured by a major innovative pharmaceutical company and stored appropriately. We did not follow up patients actively after discharge. Even though murine typhus is a global disease, diagnostics have been neglected and are inadequate. There is no consensus on appropriate IFA murine typhus diagnostic cutoff titers for different levels of endemicity. Patients usually present with low R. typhi bacterial blood loads, and there has been minimal research on improvements in diagnostic assays [26]. We chose an azithromycin dose of 500 mg followed by 250 mg once a day for 2 days, based on evidence available for scrub typhus [27, 28]. A randomized trial in Korean patients with scrub typhus found that a single 500-mg azithromycin dose was as efficacious, in terms of fever clearance and relapse, as doxycycline at 200 mg/d for 7 days [28]. To our knowledge, no trials have compared different azithromycin dose regimens for any rickettsial disease. These data have particular bearing for pregnant women with murine typhus [14]. It has been argued that doxycycline could be considered less stringently as therapy in pregnancy and children, because no correlation was found between the use of doxycycline and teratogenic effects during pregnancy or dental staining in children [29]. However, recent evidence has associated both doxycycline and azithromycin with spontaneous abortions [30]. Interestingly, 2 patients with Brill-Zinsser disease have been reported with failure of oral azithromycin therapy (500 mg/d for 3 days) [31]. Because R. typhi and R. prowazekii are closely related, these failures may have a similar mechanism to those we report. Acquired azithromycin resistance in other human pathogens, such as Mycoplasma pneumonia and Neisseria gonorrhoeae, is mediated by the ribosomal target of the antibiotic, 23S ribosomal RNA [32]. We are aware of no equivalent data for R. typhi, and investigations of genomic (especially 23S ribosomal RNA) and phenotypic markers of resistance to azithromycin, and 14-membered lactone ring macrolides, are urgently needed.

Supplementary Data

Supplementary materials are available at Clinical Infectious Diseases online. Consisting of data provided by the authors to benefit the reader, the posted materials are not copyedited and are the sole responsibility of the authors, so questions or comments should be addressed to the corresponding author. Click here for additional data file.
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