Ethosuximide Oral Solution |
Zarontin Oral Solution |
Clinical Trial: A Comparison of GV Mouth Washes,Nystatin,Ketoconazole Tabs in Treating Oropharyngeal Candidiasis
This study is no longer recruiting patients.
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Purpose
In resource constrained societies and where HIV is a problem, oral thrush causes significant morbidity. In adults ketoconazole is used and sometimes oral nystatin. Both drugs are relatively expensive compared to GV solution and ketoconazole has significant side effects especially in association with some of the treatments for HIV related problems.
In children either GV solutions or nystatin are used, GV is a fraction of the cost of nystatin.
GV at 1% solution discolours the mouth (blue) and in the older child and adult would mark them out as having HIV infections. A much more dilute solution of GV has proved equally effective in vitro and would not carry the same cosmetic problem.
In this study of the children, we have compared the 3 solutions, 1%GV, 0.00165% GV and nystatin oral drops - all masked so that they look the same - to see if GV is more effective than nystatin, and to see if the weaker solution of GV is as effective as the stronger solution.
| Condition | Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
| Oropharyngeal candidiasis | Drug: Gentian violet 1% & 0.00165% solution, nystatin solution | Phase III |
MedlinePlus related topics: Candidiasis; Respiratory Diseases
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment, Randomized, Double-Blind, Dose Comparison, Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study
Official Title: A Comparison of Gentian Violet Mouth Washes, Nystatin Drops and Ketoconazole Tabs in the Treatment of Oropharyngeal Candidiasis
Secondary Outcomes: Clinical and saliva fungal clearance in HIV infected and HIV uninfected children at 12 days and at 21 days
Expected Total Enrollment: 558
Study start: November 2002; Study completion: December 2005
Last follow-up: April 2005; Data entry closure: May 2005
A double blind randomised trial of 2 strengths of GV solution and nystatin oral drops in the treatment of oropharyngeal candidiasis in children.
Children with oral thrush were enrolled from the paediatric wards of the Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital after permission and full information was given to the guardians.
Children of any age up to 14 years were included.
Mothers or guardians gave permission after pre counselling for HIV testing, and a saliva sample collection on enrollment. A full history and examination was carried out. The extent and severity of the candial infection recorded on oral pictorial graphs and graded.
The child was then prescribed a treatment of A, B or C solution which was introduced into the mouth with a pipette. One ml of the solution was prescribed 3 times a day for 10 days.
The children were reviewed on day 3 to ensure no worsening of the condition and on day 12 when another saliva sample was taken.
A further review was carried out on day 21 of a limited number of children to repeat the saliva test.
Exclusions to the study were children who were already on an antifungal agent or those who had evidence of infection beyond the pharynx into the peritonsillar bed, suggesting the presence of oesophageal infection. These children were prescribed ketoconazole tabs.
If the oral infection was worse on day 3 micoconazole gel was prescribed and the study medication stopped.
Sample size to acheive 80% power to detect a difference in failure rates of 20% and 10% (20% in the nystatin group and 10% in the GV groups) is 155 in each group.This assumes an HIV positivity of 50%. As a drop out rate of 20% is expected from death (in some HIV infected patients) or failure to attend for follow up, a sample size of 186 per group is to be recruited. This gives an overall number to be enrolled of 558 patients.
Recruitment has been completed - analysis is in progress.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- all children up to 14 years age with proven oral candidiasis
Exclusion Criteria:
- children already on an antifungal agent or who had received an antifungal agent in the last week.
Location Information
Malawi
Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Paediatric Dept, Box 360, Blantyre, 3, Malawi
ELizabeth M Molyneux, FRCPCH FFAEM, Principal Investigator, Malawi College of Medicine
More Information
Last Updated: August 8, 2005
Record first received: August 7, 2005
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00128323
Health Authority: Malawi: College of Medicine Research and Ethics Committee
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-08-23

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