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The goal of this clinical trial is to to evaluate the drug rezafungin in the treatment of Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CPA) in male and female patients aged 18 years and over with limited treatment options.
The study aims to answer whether 6 months of rezafungin treatment is effective and safe in patients with chronic pulmonary aspergillosis with limited treatment options according to clinical and radiological response as measured by the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire, weight, and CT imaging.
Participants will:
Full description
Chronic pulmonary aspergillosis (CPA) is a progressive and potentially life-threatening fungal infection of the lungs. It is usually, but not exclusively, caused by Aspergillus fumigatus and affects patients with underlying respiratory disorders with a prevalence of less than 1 per 100,000 in Europe. The disease leads to the destruction of lung tissue typified by the insidious enlargement of cavities and fibrosis which can severely impact quality of life and has a mortality of up to 14% in one year. The only approved class of oral antifungals are the azoles such as voriconazole or itraconazole. Treatment with azoles is for a minimum of six months, however, in practice can be long-term and, in some cases, lifelong.
Azole resistance can often be attributed to the suboptimal treatment response rates in CPA. This is possibly a consequence of accumulations of the Aspergillus fungus that form 'aspergillomas' which harbour high concentrations of the fungus, thus driving the propensity to develop resistance. The resistance to one azole can often be associated with pan-azole resistance resulting in a lack of effective oral treatment options.
In addition to drug resistance, azoles are potentially hepatotoxic, can elicit adrenal suppression and neuropathy. One of the main safety concerns with voriconazole is that it has been linked to skin cancer. If azole therapy is not an option due to intolerance or resistance, patients are left with Intravenous (IV) amphotericin B (which due to toxicity can only be given short-term) or IV echinocandins. Currently licensed IV echinocandins need to be given daily which limits the practicality of longer-term therapy.
This proposed study aims to generate clinical data on the efficacy and safety of rezafungin for treatment of CPA.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Willing and able to provide written informed consent
Males or females ≥18 years of age
Established diagnosis of CPA according to ESCMID/ERS criteria (2016) which includes all the following, which should be present for ≥3 months:
Unable to receive systemic azole antifungal therapy due to any of the following: documented or anticipated resistance, intolerance, contraindication (e.g. due to drug-drug interactions or organ dysfunction), inability to take oral medication, or lack of availability. NOTE: the administration of rezafungin is monotherapy only, and subjects currently on azoles who are able to remain on therapy are not eligible
Antifungal treatment is indicated according to the opinion of the investigator due to radiological changes consistent with CPA progression OR high burden of symptoms
Female subjects of child-bearing potential <2 years post-menopausal (unless surgically sterile) must agree to and comply with using one barrier method (e.g., female condom with spermicide) plus one other highly effective method of birth control (e.g., oral contraceptive, implant, injectable, indwelling intrauterine device, vasectomized partner), or sexual abstinence (only possible if it corresponds to the subject's usual lifestyle) while participating in this study, and for 30 days after the last dose of study drug. Male subjects must be vasectomized, abstain from heterosexual intercourse, or agree to use barrier contraception (condom with spermicide), and agree not to donate sperm while participating in the study and for 120 days from the last IV dose of study drug, unless the partner is >2 years post-menopausal or otherwise sterile.
Willingness to comply with all aspects and assessments required in this study
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
60 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Terry Nichols; Lisa Bax
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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