Unbound MEDLINE

A randomized trial of doxycycline for Mansonella perstans infection. The New England journal of medicine [N Engl J Med] Journal article

 
TitleA randomized trial of doxycycline for Mansonella perstans infection.
Author(s)Coulibaly YI, Dembele B, Diallo AA, Lipner EM, Doumbia SS, Coulibaly SY, Konate S, Diallo DA, Yalcouye D, Kubofcik J, Doumbo OK, Traore AK, Keita AD, Fay MP, Traore SF, Nutman TB, Klion AD 
InstitutionFaculty of Medicine, Pharmacy and Odontostomatology, University of Bamako, Bamako, Mali.
SourceN Engl J Med 2009 Oct 8; 361(15):1448-58.
MeSHAdolescent
Adult
Aged
Albendazole
Animals
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Doxycycline
Drug Therapy, Combination
Elephantiasis, Filarial
Female
Filaricides
Humans
Ivermectin
Male
Mansonella
Mansonelliasis
Middle Aged
Rickettsiaceae Infections
Symbiosis
Treatment Outcome
Wolbachia
Wuchereria bancrofti
Young Adult
AbstractBACKGROUND: Mansonella perstans infection is common in areas of Africa where Wuchereria bancrofti, a causative agent of lymphatic filariasis, is endemic. M. perstans is refractory to standard antifilarial therapies. The recent discovery of bacterial endosymbionts (e.g., wolbachia) in most filarial species, including M. perstans, provides new therapeutic options for reducing microfilaremia.
METHODS: In an open-label, randomized trial, we recruited subjects with M. perstans microfilaremia, with or without concomitant W. bancrofti infection, from four villages in Mali and randomly assigned them to receive doxycycline, at a dose of 200 mg daily for 6 weeks (106 subjects), or no treatment (110). At 6 months, subjects who were coinfected with W. bancrofti underwent a second random assignment, to treatment with a single dose of albendazole (400 mg) and ivermectin (150 microg per kilogram of body weight) or no treatment. Subjects were monitored daily during the first 6-week study period for adverse events. M. perstans and W. bancrofti microfilarial levels were assessed at 6, 12, and 36 months.
RESULTS: At 12 months, 67 of 69 subjects who had received treatment with doxycycline only (97%) had no detectable M. perstans microfilariae per 60 microl of blood, as compared with 10 of 63 subjects who had received no treatment (16%) (relative risk, 6.18; 95% confidence interval, 3.63 to 11.89; P<0.001). At 36 months, M. perstans microfilaremia remained suppressed in 48 of 64 subjects who had received treatment with doxycycline only (75%), a finding that was consistent with a macrofilaricidal effect of doxycycline. Vomiting was more frequent in the doxycycline-treated group than in the untreated group (17% vs. 4%).
CONCLUSIONS: These results are consistent with previous findings that M. perstans harbors the intracellular endosymbiont, wolbachia, and suggest that doxycycline is an effective therapy for M. perstans infection. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00340691.)
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
Randomized Controlled Trial
Research Support, N.I.H., Intramural
PubMed ID19812401
  
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