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Comparing Two Antibiotic Therapy Periods (3 Versus 7 Days) in Patients With Mild Leptospirosis and Seen at the Hospital in 5 French Overseas Departments (Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana, Reunion, Mayotte) (LEPTO3)

U

University Hospital Center of Martinique

Status and phase

Not yet enrolling
Phase 4

Conditions

Mild Leptospirosis

Treatments

Drug: 3 days of antibiotherapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04211649
2024-516533-13-00 (EU Trial (CTIS) Number)
19_RIPH1_07

Details and patient eligibility

About

Leptospirosis is a globally distributed neglected tropical disease affecting subtropical and tropical areas, such as the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean, with favorable climatic conditions for disease transmission. It shows a strong seasonality, with epidemic potential especially after heavy rainfall. A recent systematic review by Costa et al. (2015) places leptospirosis among the leading zoonotic causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, with 1.03 million cases and 58,900 deaths each year.

Leptospirosis is an important public health problem, particularly within economically vulnerable populations. It is also emerging as a health threat in new settings due to globalization and climate change. Disasters and extreme weather events are recognized to precipitate epidemics.

Clinical manifestations are highly polymorphic, ranging from an anicteric, influenza-like form to severe forms with hepato-renal or pulmonary failures which are associated with high mortality.

Antibiotic therapy should be prescribed early, as soon as leptospirosis is suspected and preferably within the first 5 days, before leptospira spread to the tissues. In the treatment of mild forms, usual antibiotics are oral amoxicillin or doxycycline for a standard treatment duration of 7 days. In hospitalized cases of leptospirosis, parenteral antibiotic therapy with ceftriaxone is often favored as first-line therapy.

The most widely used antibiotics in the French Caribbean and Indian Ocean regions are amoxicillin, doxycyclin and third generation cephalosporins such as ceftriaxone.

Research hypothesis:

The effects of shorter antibiotic therapy periods for other infectious diseases have been explored by several authors. The efficacy of short ceftriaxone treatment has been highlighted for typhoid fever or meningococcal meningitis. In a retrospective series of 21 cases, the interest of short treatment periods (3-6 days) for mild and severe leptospirosis has also been described. A minimal 3-day therapy period would seem necessary in order to biologically confirm leptospirosis diagnosis and to rule out other community-acquired infections.

Our study proposal is the conduct of a non-inferiority trial comparing a shortened antibiotic therapy period of 3 days with the standard treatment period of 7 days in patients with mild leptospirosis and seen at the hospital in 5 French overseas departments (Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana, Reunion, Mayotte).

Originality and innovative aspects:

To our knowledge, the efficacy of a 3-day antibiotic therapy for mild leptospirosis, as compared to the standard 7 day period, has not yet been explored.

In addition, the LEPTO3 study will be among the first clinical trials to focus on the endemic public health problem, which is leptospirosis, at a large geographical level (Caribbean and Indian Ocean regions) and to involve a high level of collaboration between medical and scientific teams of these territories.

Full description

Leptospirosis is a globally distributed neglected tropical disease affecting subtropical and tropical areas, such as the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean, with favorable climatic conditions for disease transmission. It shows a strong seasonality, with epidemic potential especially after heavy rainfall. A recent systematic review by Costa et al. (2015) places leptospirosis among the leading zoonotic causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, with 1.03 million cases and 58,900 deaths each year.

Leptospirosis is an important public health problem, particularly within economically vulnerable populations. It is also emerging as a health threat in new settings due to globalization and climate change. Disasters and extreme weather events are recognized to precipitate epidemics.

Clinical manifestations are highly polymorphic, ranging from an anicteric, influenza-like form to severe forms with hepato-renal or pulmonary failures which are associated with high mortality.

Antibiotic therapy should be prescribed early, as soon as leptospirosis is suspected and preferably within the first 5 days, before leptospira spread to the tissues. In the treatment of mild forms, usual antibiotics are oral amoxicillin or doxycycline for a standard treatment duration of 7 days. In hospitalized cases of leptospirosis, parenteral antibiotic therapy with ceftriaxone is often favored as first-line therapy.

The most widely used antibiotics in the French Caribbean and Indian Ocean regions are amoxicillin, doxycyclin and third generation cephalosporins such as ceftriaxone.

Research hypothesis:

The effects of shorter antibiotic therapy periods for other infectious diseases have been explored by several authors. The efficacy of short ceftriaxone treatment has been highlighted for typhoid fever or meningococcal meningitis. In a retrospective series of 21 cases, the interest of short treatment periods (3-6 days) for mild and severe leptospirosis has also been described. A minimal 3-day therapy period would seem necessary in order to biologically confirm leptospirosis diagnosis and to rule out other community-acquired infections.

Our study proposal is the conduct of a non-inferiority trial comparing a shortened antibiotic therapy period of 3 days with the standard treatment period of 7 days in patients with mild leptospirosis and seen at the hospital in 5 French overseas departments (Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana, Reunion, Mayotte).

Originality and innovative aspects:

To our knowledge, the efficacy of a 3-day antibiotic therapy for mild leptospirosis, as compared to the standard 7 day period, has not yet been explored.

In addition, the LEPTO3 study will be among the first clinical trials to focus on the endemic public health problem, which is leptospirosis, at a large geographical level (Caribbean and Indian Ocean regions) and to involve a high level of collaboration between medical and scientific teams of these territories.

Main objective :

Compare the efficacy of a 3-day antibiotic therapy period with the standard period of 7 days in mild leptospirosis patients seen at the hospital in 5 French overseas departments (Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana, Reunion, Mayotte)

Secondary objectives :

  • Compare the evolution of clinical and biological characteristics in the 2 groups of patients (antibiotic therapy duration 3 days versus 7 days)
  • Compare lengths of hospital stay in the 2 groups of patients (antibiotic therapy duration 3 days versus 7 days)
  • Examine factors linked to a potential treatment failure in patients
  • Assess patient tolerance to treatment

Enrollment

220 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Patient aged 18 years and above at the time of study inclusion
  2. Patient consulting at a recruiting hospital center
  3. Clinical and biological suspicion of leptospirosis, confirmed by serological rapid testing or PCR at most 72 hours after start of antibiotic treatment
  4. Affiliated or beneficiary of a social security scheme (For French Guiana, patients benefiting from State Medical Aid (AME) will be considered, in accordance with the provisions of article L1121-8-1 of the Public Health Code
  5. Acceptance of participation in the clinical trial and in the follow-up process at 7 and 21 days (from start of antibiotic therapy)
  6. Provision of a signed consent form from the study participant

Exclusion criteria

  1. Presence of one of the severity criteria appearing between the time of first patient care at the hospital and study inclusion:

    1. Hemodynamic failure with onset of septic shock defined by persisting hypotension requiring vasopressor amines to maintain mean arterial pressure ≥65 mm Hg and blood lactates >2 mmol/L despite adequate volume resuscitation (73)
    2. Hematologic failure with hemoglobin <7 g / dL requiring red blood cell transfusion (74) or platelets <20 G / L requiring platelet transfusion (75)
    3. Ventilatory failure defined by PaO2 / Fi O2 ratio <300 mmHg (76) or resort to mechanical ventilation
    4. Renal failure defined by serum creatinine > 301 μmol / L 76) or resort to renal dialysis
    5. Hepatic failure defined by total bilirubinemia> 101 μmol / L (76)
    6. Heart failure (eg: ECG anomalies, myocarditis, cardiogenic shock)
    7. Neurologic affection such as meningitis, encephalitis, intracerebral hemorragia, stroke
    8. Ocular symptoms such as uveitis.
    9. Hemoptysis, lesional pulmonary oedema for pulmonary affection
    10. Hemorrhagic syndrome
  2. Diagnosis of another bacterial infection documented during initial patient assessment (e.g. Gram-negative bacteremia, digestive tract infection, bacterial pneumonia)

  3. Intake of antibiotics, active on leptospirosis, the week before clinical and biological suspicion of leptospirosis

  4. Leptospirosis diagnosis by PCR or serological rapid testing after the 7th day from symptom onset

  5. Pregnant or lactating woman, or woman of childbearing age without effective contraception

  6. Previous hypersensitivity to β-lactams and doxycycline or contraindication to the latter's use

  7. Ongoing treatment that is contraindicated with one of the study treatments

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

220 participants in 2 patient groups

3 days of antibiotherapy
Experimental group
Description:
The patient viewed for the first time at the hospital and suspected of leptospirosis received a probabilistic antibiotherapy
Treatment:
Drug: 3 days of antibiotherapy
7 days of antibiotherapy (Amoxycilline or Doxycycline)
No Intervention group
Description:
When the leptospirosis is confirmed ( PCR Leptospirosis positive) the pobabilistic antibiotherapy is switched to a prophylactic antibiotherapy with Amoxicillin or Doxycycline.

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Central trial contact

Isabelle CALMONT, Master; Janick JEAN-MARIE, Master

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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