| Literature DB >> 34287382 |
Cody J Malone1, Immaculate Nevis1, Eduardo Fernández1, Ana Sanchez1.
Abstract
Chagas disease remains a neglected tropical disease, causing significant burden in the Americas and countries that receive immigrants from endemic nations. Current pharmaceutical treatments are suboptimal, not only varying drastically in efficacy, depending on the stage of disease, but also presenting significant risk of adverse events. The objective of this review is to provide a timely update on the efficacy and safety of current trypanocidals. Eligible studies published from January 2015 to December 2020 were retrieved by one reviewer from six electronic databases. Ana-lysis was done with review management software and risk of bias was assessed using tools appropriate for the type of study (i.e., experimental or observational). Thirteen studies (10 observational and three RCTs) were included in the analysis. All 13 studies tested Benznidazole (BNZ) or Nifurtimox (NFX), and two studies also tested Posaconazole (POS) or E1224 (Ravucanazole). BNZ was found to be the most efficacious trypanocidal drug compared to Nifurtimox, POS, and E1224; it also resulted in the highest percentage of adverse effects (AEs) and treatment discontinuation due to its toxicity. Adults experienced higher frequency of neurological AEs while taking BNZ or NFX compared to children. Children had a higher frequency of general AEs compared to adults while taking BNZ. Overall, BNZ is still the most efficacious, but development of new, less toxic drugs is paramount for the quality of life of patients. Studies testing combination therapies and shorter regimens are needed, as is the devising of better clinical parameters and laboratory biomarkers to evaluate treatment efficacy. Considering the variability in methodology and reporting of the studies included in the present analysis, we offer some recommendations for the improvement and replicability of clinical studies investigating pharmacological treatment of Chagas disease. These include full disclosure of methodology, standardization of outcome measures, and always collecting and reporting data on both the efficacy of trypanocidals and on safety outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: American Trypanosomiasis; Chagas disease; rapid review; trypanocidals
Year: 2021 PMID: 34287382 PMCID: PMC8293415 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed6030128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Figure 1Prisma flowchart of the study selection process.
Characteristics of the selected studies.
| Study | No. of Patients | Study Design | Country of Study | Study Period | Treatment, Comparison |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alarcón de Noya, et al., 2017 | 122 | Cross-sectional | Venezuela | Dec. 2007–Jan. 2010 | BNZ (6 mg/kg/day) in three doses for 60 days |
| Albareda, et al., 2018 | 87 | Prospective | Argentina | 60 months | BNZ (5 mg/kg/day) for 60 days |
| Antunes, et al., 2016 | 244 | Cross-sectional | Brazil | 2008–2010 | Had received BNZ (n = 46; 3 removed) n = 43 ‡NT |
| Cardoso, et al., 2018 | 1813 | Cross-sectional (2013-2014 baseline) | Brazil | 2013–2014 to 2015–2016 | Had received BNZ (n = 493) |
| Colantonio, et al., 2016 | 111 (children 6–16 yoa) | Retrospective cohort | Argentina | Data used from 1991-1996 RCT (median 8.6 yr. follow-up) | BNZ (5 mg/kg/day) for 60 days |
| Crespillo-Andújar, et al., 2019 | 471 | Prospective cohort | Spain | Jan 2014–Mar 2018 | Had received BNZ |
| Fragata-Filho, et al., 2016 | 310 | Retrospective cohort | Brazil | Pre-2002 to 2013 | BNZ Treated (n = 263) 5 mg/kg/day for 60 days |
| Losada Galván, et al., 2019 | 62 (adults ≥ 18 yoa) | Retrospective cohort | Spain | July 2008-January 2017 | BNZ—Full dose 5 mg/kg/day for 60 days |
| Morillo, et al., 2015 | 2854 (adults 18–75 yoa) | RCT | Multiple countries | 2004–2011 | BNZ—5 mg/kg/day for 60 days was modified in Feb. 2009 to the administration of a fixed dose of 300 mg/day and a variable duration of therapy (between 40 and 80 days) |
| Morillo, et al., 2017 | 120 (adults ≥18 to ≤ 50 yoa) | RCT | Argentina (77.5%), | 27 July 2011–24 Dec. 2013 | (1) POS 400 mg b.i.d. |
| Schmidt, et al., 2019 | 1508 (adults 18–75 yoa) | Prospective | Multiple | 2004–2011 | BNZ (5mg/kg/day) for |
| Soverow, et al., 2019 | 89 (adults 18–60 yoa) | Prospective cohort | USA | 2008–2014 | Dependent upon drug |
| Torrico, et al., 2018 | 231 | RCT | Bolivia | 19 July 2011–13 June 2013 | (1) High-dose E1224 |
‡ Three participants terminated treatment early and were excluded; † The cross-sectional study had different outcomes of interest than the cohort study; b.i.d = twice daily; BNZ = Benznidazole, E1224 = water-soluble Ravuconazole prodrug; NFX = Nifurtimox, NT = no treatment, POS = Posaconazole, yoa: years of age.
Infection-related outcomes.
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| Morillo, et al., 2015 [ | End of treatment PCR conversion rate: BNZ 66.2% and PLA 33.5% | 2-year conversion rate: BNZ 55.4% and PLA 35.3% |
| Morillo, et al., 2017 [ | RT-PCR conversion rate at 30 & 60 days: POS 93% & 90%, POS + BNZ 88.9% & 92.3%, and BNZ 89.7% & 89.3% | 360 day conversion was only sustained in BNZ or BNZ + POS compared with PLA and POS |
| Torrico, et al., 2018 [ | End of treatment parasite clearance (PCR) (65 days): PLA 26%, LD 90%, SD 89%, HD 76% and BNZ 91% | Sustained clearance at 12 months: PLA 9%, LD 8%, SD 11%, HD 29% and BNZ 82% |
| At 12 months follow-up analysis with conventional ELISA found no statistical difference trypanocidals and placebo | At 12 months follow-up there was a small but significant reduction in trypanolytic anti-α-gal antibodies comparing BNZ to placebo, (9% BNZ seroconverted vs. 4% of PLA) measured by CL-ELISA | |
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| Alarcón de Noya, et al., 2017 [ | Negative PCR conversion at follow-up (25 months): | |
| Albareda, et al., 2018 [ | Seroreversion ‡ at end of follow-up: | |
| Antunes, et al., 2016 [ | BNZ of ≤ 60 days and BNZ >60 days were both more efficacious than no treatment in reducing parasite load (via PCR), but no statistical differences were found between both treatments | |
LD: low-dose; SD: Short-dose; HD: high-dose; PLA: Placebo; PCR: Polymerase chain reaction; RT-PCR: real time PCR; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; CL-ELISA: chemiluminescent ELISA; ‡ As determined by sero-negativity in at least 2 of 3 tests (ELISA, Hemagglutination, and/or Immunofluorescence).
Patient-related outcomes.
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| Morillo et al., 2015 | No significant between-group differences were observed in any component of the primary outcome |
| Torrico et al., 2018 [ | ECG outcomes were similar across treatment groups, with no |
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| Antunes et al., 2016 [ | No cardiac alterations were detected in the study population, regardless of group |
| Cardoso et al., 2018 [ | 14/493 (2.8%) of the treated group died during the 2-year follow-up; 100/1320 (7.6%) of the control group died during the 2-year follow-up ( |
| Colantonio et al., 2016 | After statistical adjustment treatment with BNZfor 60 days was not associated with less ECG abnormalities as compared to no treatment over a median follow-up of 8.6 years. |
| Fragata-Filho et al., 2016 | 20.92% of the treated patients developed ECG alterations. 3.19% of the untreated patients had worsening of ECG alterations. |
| Schmidt et al., 2019 [ | Those with even minimal wall motion abnormalities have poorer long-term outcomes. |
| Soverow, et al., 2019 [ | Treated patients were less likely to have progression of their ECG disease (OR = 0.13, |
ECG = Electrocardiogram, NT-proBNP = N-terminal of the prohormone brain natriuretic peptide, LV WMSI = Left ventricular wall motion score index, QTcF = QT interval/CubeRootRR (seconds).
Comparison of adverse events among adults and children ¥.
| Children NFX | Adults NFX | Statistical Significance |
|---|---|---|
| General: 75.3% [64/85] | General: 82.1% [23/28] | |
| Children BNZ | Adults BNZ | Statistical significance |
| General: 43.5% [20/26] | General: 11.7% [2/17] | |
| Statistical significance between NFX and BNZ | ||
¥ Data are from Alarcón de Noya, et al., 2017 [23].