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A Study of Itraconazole in Preventing the Return of Histoplasmosis, a Fungal Infection, in Patients With AIDS

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) logo

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 1

Conditions

Histoplasmosis
HIV Infections

Treatments

Drug: Itraconazole

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

NIH

Identifiers

NCT00000992
11059 (Registry Identifier)
ACTG 084

Details and patient eligibility

About

To test the effectiveness of itraconazole in preventing the recurrence of disseminated histoplasmosis in AIDS patients.

Histoplasmosis is a serious opportunistic infection in patients with AIDS. Amphotericin B has been used to treat the infection. Although the response to this treatment is generally good, up to 90 percent of AIDS patients who have taken amphotericin B to treat their histoplasmosis infection will have a relapse (that is, they will get the disease again) within 12 months following treatment. Ketoconazole has been used to prevent relapse, but available information suggests that up to 50 percent of AIDS patients relapse even with ketoconazole treatment. A more effective therapy to prevent recurrence is needed. Itraconazole has been used successfully to treat disseminated histoplasmosis in non-AIDS patients and it is hoped that it may be more effective in preventing histoplasmosis relapse.

Full description

Histoplasmosis is a serious opportunistic infection in patients with AIDS. Amphotericin B has been used to treat the infection. Although the response to this treatment is generally good, up to 90 percent of AIDS patients who have taken amphotericin B to treat their histoplasmosis infection will have a relapse (that is, they will get the disease again) within 12 months following treatment. Ketoconazole has been used to prevent relapse, but available information suggests that up to 50 percent of AIDS patients relapse even with ketoconazole treatment. A more effective therapy to prevent recurrence is needed. Itraconazole has been used successfully to treat disseminated histoplasmosis in non-AIDS patients and it is hoped that it may be more effective in preventing histoplasmosis relapse.

AIDS patients who have been successfully treated with amphotericin B for an acute first episode of disseminated histoplasmosis are selected for treatment. They receive daily oral doses of itraconazole for a total of 52 weeks. Patients who do not experience significant toxicity related to the drug may continue to receive itraconazole until the last patient completes 52 weeks of itraconazole therapy or has the study drug discontinued prior to completing 52 weeks of therapy. AMENDED: Patients will be treated for a minimum of 52 weeks. Patients who complete the 52 weeks and remain on the study drug will continue to be followed. If itraconazole becomes licensed for histoplasmosis, study drug must be discontinued at the end of 52 weeks of therapy or at the time of licensure for patients who have received more than 52 weeks of therapy.

Sex

All

Ages

13+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria

Concurrent Medication:

Itraconazole therapy must begin no more than 6 weeks after discontinuing primary amphotericin B therapy; itraconazole therapy may begin immediately after stopping the primary therapy with amphotericin B.

Allowed:

  • Oral contraceptives.
  • Methadone.
  • Narcotics.
  • Acyclovir.
  • Acetaminophen.
  • Sulfonamides.
  • Trimethoprim / sulfamethoxazole.
  • Aerosolized pentamidine for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) or PCP prophylaxis (patients with a total CD4+ count < 200 or a history of PCP should receive PCP prophylaxis).
  • Treatment IND drugs.
  • Zidovudine.
  • Topical antifungals.
  • Discouraged:
  • Antacids.
  • Sucralfate.
  • H2 blockers.

Concurrent Treatment:

Allowed:

  • Radiation therapy for mucocutaneous Kaposi's sarcoma.

Prior Medication:

Required:

  • Prior treatment with amphotericin B for disseminated histoplasmosis:
  • minimum total dose of 15 mg/kg for patients < 67 kg, or 1 g for patients > 67 kg; must have been administered over 6 months or less.

Allowed:

  • Amphotericin B as maintenance therapy for a maximum of 6 weeks following completion of primary therapy.
  • Zidovudine.
  • Prophylaxis for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia.

Exclusion Criteria

Co-existing Condition:

Patients with the following conditions are excluded:

  • History of allergy to, or intolerance of, imidazoles or azoles.
  • Clinical findings of active histoplasmosis.
  • Histoplasmosis of the central nervous system.
  • Inability to take oral medications reliably or severe malabsorption syndrome.
  • Malignancies requiring cytotoxic therapy.
  • Culture-proven systemic Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare, coccidioidomycosis, or cryptococcosis.

Concurrent Medication:

Excluded:

  • Amphotericin B as maintenance therapy.
  • Immunostimulants.
  • Ketoconazole.
  • Systemic antifungals.
  • Steroids in excess of physiologic replacement doses.
  • Cytotoxic chemotherapy.
  • Investigational agents not specifically allowed.
  • Antacids for 4 hours before and 4 hours after itraconazole.

Concurrent Treatment:

Excluded:

  • Lymphocyte replacement.

Patients with the following conditions are excluded:

  • History of allergy to, or intolerance of, imidazoles or azoles.
  • Clinical findings of active histoplasmosis.
  • Histoplasmosis of the central nervous system.
  • Inability to take oral medications reliably or severe malabsorption syndrome.
  • Malignancies requiring cytotoxic therapy.
  • Culture-proven systemic Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare, coccidioidomycosis, or cryptococcosis.

Prior Medication:

Excluded within 30 days of study entry:

  • Immunostimulants.
  • Ketoconazole.
  • Systemic antifungals.
  • Steroids in excess of physiologic replacement doses.
  • Cytotoxic chemotherapy.

Prior Treatment:

Excluded:

  • Lymphocyte replacement.

Risk Behavior:

Excluded:

  • Patients who in the opinion of the investigator would be undependable with regard to adherence to protocol.

Inclusion criteria are:

  • HIV infection documented by presence of antibody, by ELISA with Western blot confirmation, or serum p24 antigen, or by recovery of HIV in culture.
  • Acute first episode of disseminated histoplasmosis documented by recovery and identification of H. capsulatum from cultures obtained from extrapulmonary sites.
  • Oriented to person, place, and time, and able to give written informed consent.

Trial contacts and locations

8

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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