S'abonner

Treatment of adult chronic indeterminate Chagas disease with benznidazole and three E1224 dosing regimens: a proof-of-concept, randomised, placebo-controlled trial - 26/03/18

Doi : 10.1016/S1473-3099(17)30538-8 
Faustino Torrico, ProfPhD a, b, *, Joaquim Gascon, PhD c, *, Lourdes Ortiz, MD d, Cristina Alonso-Vega, MD e, María-Jesús Pinazo, MD c, Alejandro Schijman, PhD f, Igor C Almeida, DSc g, Fabiana Alves, PhD e, Nathalie Strub-Wourgaft, MD e, Isabela Ribeiro, MD e,
on behalf of the

E1224 Study Group

  Members listed at the end of the paper
Glaucia Santina, Bethania Blum, Erika Correia, Facundo Garcia-Bournisen, Michel Vaillant, Jimena Ramos Morales, Jimy Jose Pinto Rocha, Gimena Rojas Delgadillo, Helmut Ramon Magne Anzoleaga, Nilce Mendoza, Roxana Challapa Quechover, Maria Yurly Escobar Caballero, Daniel Franz Lozano Beltran, Albert Mendoza Zalabar, Lizeth Rojas Panozo, Alejandro Palacios Lopez, Dunia Torrico Terceros, Violeta Alejandra Fernandez Galvez, Letty Cardozo, Gabriela Cuellar, Rudy Nelson Vasco Arenas, Isabel Gonzales, Carlos Florencio Hoyos Delfin, Lineth Garcia, Rudy Parrado, Anabelle de la Barra, Nair Montano, Sandro Villarroel, Tomas Duffy, Margarita Bisio, Juan Carlos Ramirez, Fred Duncanson, Michael Everson, Antonia Daniels, Makoto Asada, Eugene Cox, David Wesche, Paul Matthias Diderichsen, Alexandre F Marques, Luis Izquierdo, Silvia Sanz Sender, Joan Carlos Reverter, Manuel Morales, Wladimiro Jimenez

a Universidad Mayor de San Simón, Faculty of Medicine, Cochabamba, Bolivia 
b Fundación CEADES, Cochabamba, Bolivia 
c ISGlobal, Barcelona Centre for International Health Research, Barcelona, Spain 
d Universidad Autónoma Juan Misael Saracho de Tarija, Faculty of Medicine, Tarija, Bolivia 
e Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative, Geneva, Switzerland 
f Laboratorio de Biología Molecular de la Enfermedad de Chagas, Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Genética y Biología Molecular “Dr Héctor N Torres”—INGEBI-CONICET, Buenos Aires, Argentina 
g Border Biomedical Research Center, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA 

* Correspondence to: Dr Isabela Ribeiro, Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative, 1202 Geneva, Switzerland Correspondence to: Dr Isabela Ribeiro, Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative Geneva 1202 Switzerland

Summary

Background

Chagas disease is a major neglected vector-borne disease. In this study, we investigated the safety and efficacy of three oral E1224 (a water-soluble ravuconazole prodrug) regimens and benznidazole versus placebo in adult chronic indeterminate Chagas disease.

Method

In this proof-of-concept, double-blind, randomised phase 2 clinical trial, we recruited adults (18–50 years) with confirmed diagnosis of Trypanosoma cruzi infection from two outpatient units in Bolivia. Patients were randomised with a computer-generated randomisation list, which was stratified by centre and used a block size of ten. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1:1:1:1) to five oral treatment groups: high-dose E1224 (duration 8 weeks, total dose 4000 mg), low-dose E1224 (8 weeks, 2000 mg), short-dose E1224 (4 weeks + 4 weeks placebo, 2400 mg), benznidazole (60 days, 5 mg/kg per day), or placebo (8 weeks, E1224-matched tablets). Double-blinding was limited to the E1224 and placebo arms, and assessors were masked to all treatment allocations. The primary efficacy endpoint was parasitological response to E1224 at the end of treatment, assessed by PCR. The secondary efficacy endpoints were parasitological response to benznidazole at end of treatment, assessed by PCR; sustainability of parasitological response until 12 months; parasite clearance and changes in parasite load; incidence of conversion to negative response in conventional and non-conventional (antigen trypomastigote chemiluminescent ELISA [AT CL-ELISA]) serological response; changes in levels of biomarkers; and complete response. The primary analysis population consisted of all randomised patients by their assigned treatment arms. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01489228.

Findings

Between July 19, 2011, and July 26, 2012, we screened 560 participants with confirmed Chagas disease, of whom 231 were enrolled and assigned to high-dose E1224 (n=45), low-dose E1224 (n=48), short-dose E1224 (n=46), benznidazole (n=45), or placebo (n=47). Parasite clearance was observed with E1224 during the treatment phase, but no sustained response was seen with low-dose and short-dose regimens, whereas 13 patients (29%, 95% CI 16·4–44·3) had sustained response with the high-dose regimen compared with four (9%, 2·4–20·4) in the placebo group (p<0·0001). Benznidazole had a rapid and sustained effect on parasite clearance, with 37 patients (82%, 67·9–92·0) with sustained response at 12-month follow-up. After 1 week of treatment, mean quantitative PCR repeated measurements showed a significant reduction in parasite load in all treatment arms versus placebo. Parasite levels in the low-dose and short-dose E1224 groups gradually returned to placebo levels. Both treatments were well tolerated. Reversible, dose-dependent liver enzyme increases were seen with E1224 and benznidazole. 187 (81%) participants developed treatment-emergent adverse events and six (3%) developed treatment-emergent serious adverse events. Treatment-emergent adverse events were headaches, nausea, pruritus, peripheral neuropathy, and hypersensitivity.

Interpretation

E1224 is the first new chemical entity developed for Chagas disease in decades. E1224 displayed a transient, suppressive effect on parasite clearance, whereas benznidazole showed early and sustained efficacy until 12 months of follow-up. Despite PCR limitations, our results support increased diagnosis and access to benznidazole standard regimen, and provide a development roadmap for novel benznidazole regimens in monotherapy and in combinations with E1224.

Funding

Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Plan


© 2018  Elsevier Ltd. Tous droits réservés.
Ajouter à ma bibliothèque Retirer de ma bibliothèque Imprimer
Export

    Export citations

  • Fichier

  • Contenu

Vol 18 - N° 4

P. 419-430 - avril 2018 Retour au numéro
Article précédent Article précédent
  • Safety and tolerability of a novel, polyclonal human anti-MERS coronavirus antibody produced from transchromosomic cattle: a phase 1 randomised, double-blind, single-dose-escalation study
  • John H Beigel, Jocelyn Voell, Parag Kumar, Kanakatte Raviprakash, Hua Wu, Jin-An Jiao, Eddie Sullivan, Thomas Luke, Richard T Davey
| Article suivant Article suivant
  • A cluster of multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis among patients arriving in Europe from the Horn of Africa: a molecular epidemiological study
  • Timothy M Walker, Matthias Merker, Astrid M Knoblauch, Peter Helbling, Otto D Schoch, Marieke J van der Werf, Katharina Kranzer, Lena Fiebig, Stefan Kröger, Walter Haas, Harald Hoffmann, Alexander Indra, Adrian Egli, Daniela M Cirillo, Jérôme Robert, Thomas R Rogers, Ramona Groenheit, Anne T Mengshoel, Vanessa Mathys, Marjo Haanperä, Dick van Soolingen, Stefan Niemann, Erik C Böttger, Peter M Keller

Bienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.

Déjà abonné à cette revue ?

Mon compte


Plateformes Elsevier Masson

Déclaration CNIL

EM-CONSULTE.COM est déclaré à la CNIL, déclaration n° 1286925.

En application de la loi nº78-17 du 6 janvier 1978 relative à l'informatique, aux fichiers et aux libertés, vous disposez des droits d'opposition (art.26 de la loi), d'accès (art.34 à 38 de la loi), et de rectification (art.36 de la loi) des données vous concernant. Ainsi, vous pouvez exiger que soient rectifiées, complétées, clarifiées, mises à jour ou effacées les informations vous concernant qui sont inexactes, incomplètes, équivoques, périmées ou dont la collecte ou l'utilisation ou la conservation est interdite.
Les informations personnelles concernant les visiteurs de notre site, y compris leur identité, sont confidentielles.
Le responsable du site s'engage sur l'honneur à respecter les conditions légales de confidentialité applicables en France et à ne pas divulguer ces informations à des tiers.


Tout le contenu de ce site: Copyright © 2025 Elsevier, ses concédants de licence et ses contributeurs. Tout les droits sont réservés, y compris ceux relatifs à l'exploration de textes et de données, a la formation en IA et aux technologies similaires. Pour tout contenu en libre accès, les conditions de licence Creative Commons s'appliquent.