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Phase 3 N=32 Treatment

Aztreonam for Pharyngeal Gonorrhea

Gonorrhea of Pharynx · Gonorrhea

Enrolled (actual)
32
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Jan 2022
Primary outcome: Primary: Treatment Efficacy of Pharyngeal Gonorrhea as Defined as the Proportion of Study Participants With Positive Pharyngeal Gonorrhea Culture at of Enrollment Whose Test of Cure Pharyngeal Culture is Negative — 2 Participants

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
Phase 3
Interventions
Aztreonam (Drug)
Age
Pediatric, Adult, Older Adult · 16+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
University of Washington
Primary completion
Sep 2019

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Treatment Efficacy of Pharyngeal Gonorrhea as Defined as the Proportion of Study Participants With Positive Pharyngeal Gonorrhea Culture at of Enrollment Whose Test of Cure Pharyngeal Culture is Negative
2
SECONDARY
Efficacy of 2 g Aztreonam for N. Gonorrhoeae at Anogenital Sites
9; 3
SECONDARY
Tolerability of 2g Aztreonam IM
2
SECONDARY
Side Effects of 2g Aztreonam IM
6; 1

Summary

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG) as one of the nation's top three urgent AMR threats. Since the advent of antibiotics in the 1930s, NG has developed resistance to every first-line antibiotic. Parenteral third-generation cephalosporins are now the only class of drug with consistent efficacy against NG. New therapies are urgently needed. Although some novel antimicrobials are under development, reevaluating older drugs is another option for quickly identifying additional treatments for gonorrhea. We propose a demonstration study to test a single dose of aztreonam for the treatment of pharyngeal gonorrhea. We chose to focus on pharyngeal gonorrhea because these infections are common, play an important role in fostering gonococcal resistance, and are harder to eradicate than genital infections. Although aztreonam appears to be >98.6% efficacious for anogenital NG, its efficacy at the pharynx may be less. Only 8 cases of pharyngeal gonorrhea have been documented to be treated with aztreonam, but of those, only 5 (62.5%) were cured. The dose used in those studies was 1g of aztreonam. Most antibiotics have a lower efficacy at the pharynx than anogenital sites, which is likely due to drug pharmacokinetics, i.e. difficulty in penetrating pharyngeal tissue. Thus, in the proposed study, we plan to treat 50 subjects with untreated pharyngeal gonorrhea with 2g IM Aztreonam. Objectives: The proposed study aims to evaluate the efficacy of a single 2g intramuscular (IM) dose of aztreonam in the treatment of pharyngeal gonorrhea. Secondary objectives include documenting the efficacy stratified by minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) compared with the previously document area under the curve (AUC) in order to estimate a pharmacodynamic criterion. We will also attempt to determine whether aztreonam monotherapy induces antimicrobial resistance among treatment failures. Lastly, we will evaluate the tolerability of 2g of IM aztreonam. The specific aims are: 1. Determine the proportion of persons whose pharyngeal gonococcal infections are cured with a single dose of 2g aztreonam intramuscularly. 2. Determine the proportion of persons with urethral and/or rectal gonorrhea whose infections are cured with a single dose of 2g aztreonam IM. 3. Evaluate the tolerability of 2g IM of aztreonam . 4. Estimate the best pharmacodynamics criterion (i.e. AUC/MIC ratio) for pharyngeal gonorrhea treated with aztreonam using previously published AUC for 2g aztreonam and NG isolate MIC. 5. Among treatment failures, conduct exploratory analyses comparing pre- and post-treatment MIC for evidence of induced resistance. Study Design: Prospective cohort Study Population & Inclusion Criteria: Persons diagnosed with pharyngeal gonorrhea or gonococcal urethritis who are undergoing pharyngeal gonorrhea testing, who are not yet treated. Intervention: 2g IM aztreonam x 1 Primary Outcome: Negative gonorrhea culture 4-7 days (+/- 1 day) after treatment Sample Size: 50 persons

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Persons diagnosed with pharyngeal gonorrhea or gonococcal urethritis who are undergoing pharyngeal gonorrhea testing, who are not yet treated.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Age less than 16 years
  • Receipt of antibiotics in ≤30 days
  • Known allergy to aztreonam
  • History of renal disease (including diagnosis of solitary kidney, chronic renal insufficiency, renal cell carcinoma etc.)
  • Concurrent infection with syphilis or chlamydia
  • Pregnancy and/or nursing
  • Unable to return for a follow-up visit 4-7 days (+/- 1 day).
  • Study team's discretion
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03867734). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.

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