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To assess the efficacy, safety and Population Pharmacokinetic (PPK) of morinidazole and sodium chloride injection with levofloxacin hydrochloride and sodium chloride injection sequential of levofloxacin hydrochloride tablets in women with pelvic inflammatory disease: An Open-Lable Multicenter Prospective Non-Randomized Trial
Full description
Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) is a spectrum of upper genital tract inflammations comprising endometritis, salpingitis, parametritis, oophoritis, tubo-ovarian abscess and/or pelvic peritonitis. The objectives of administering antimicrobial therapy in patients with PID are to control the symptoms and to prevent the late sequelae of the disease. Because anaerobe infections (e.g., Bacteroides fragilis infections) are associated with tubal and epithelial damage, anaerobic coverage is routinely recommended in women with pelvic infection. Guidelines have been developed in both the USA and Europe with regard to PID management. Metronidazole, a member of the nitroimidazole drug class, is included in the regimens recommended for improving anaerobic bacteria coverage. The sideeffects of metronidazole include a metallic taste, nausea, transient neutropenia, and peripheral neuropathy. Antimicrobial resistance to metronidazole has emerged after several decades of worldwide use of the drug. Morinidazole, a National Class I Antimicrobial, is a new type of third-generation nitroimidazole antimicrobial that is used for treating amoebiasis, trichomoniasis, and anaerobic bacterial infections, and which exhibits greater activity and less toxicity than metronidazole.
Morinidazole and Sodium Chloride Injection used in PID or appendicitis cases had been approved by CFDA in 2014. This phase 4 study is to assess the efficacy, safety and Population Pharmacokinetic (PPK) of morinidazole in PID.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
women between 18 and 65 years old
patients with the diagnosis of PID:
sexually active women or women have the risk of sexually transmitted infections, and
lower abdominal pain symptoms, and
lower abdominal tenderness, and adnexal and cervical motion tenderness on bimanual vaginal examination, and
as well as at least one of the following signs:
Voluntary signing of written informed consent
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
469 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Shixuan Wang
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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