1. The efficacy of a four-week, ofloxacin-containing regimen compared with standard WHO-MDT in PB leprosy
- Author
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Robert H. Gelber, Marivic F. Balagon, Paul Saunderson, R. V. Cellona, and Rodolfo M. Abalos
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,Antibiotics ,Placebo ,Surgery ,Regimen ,Pharmacotherapy ,Internal medicine ,PB leprosy ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Who criteria ,Ofloxacin ,business ,Rifampicin ,General Environmental Science ,medicine.drug - Abstract
OBJECTIVES To compare the efficacy of a 4-week ofloxacin-containing regimen and the standard WHO-MDT regimen for PB leprosy, in terms of the rate and timing of relapse after treatment completion. DESIGN 124 PB patients were enrolled in a randomised, double-blind trial. Of these, 66 received the standard 6-month WHO-MDT regimen, whereas 58 received 28 daily supervised doses of rifampicin 600mg + ofloxacin 400 mg, plus 5 months of placebo. Patients were regularly monitored for clinical response and for signs of relapse after treatment completion. RESULTS Patients enrolled in the ofloxacin group had a mean follow-up of 10.8 years (628 patient-years) with 1 early relapse at 3 years after treatment completion. On relapse, this patient remained smear negative but was reclassified by current WHO criteria (> or =6 skin lesions) as multibacillary (MB). Patients on the WHO-MDT regimen had a mean follow-up of 11.3 years (749 patient-years) with two late relapses at 8 and 12 years, both still classified as PB on relapse. CONCLUSION In conclusion, both regimens appeared generally efficacious, and, in particular, resulted in few relapses.
- Published
- 2010
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