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Human African Trypanosomiasis or sleeping sickness has made a spectacular return during the last decade, and in many places the demand largely surpasses the capacities of the treatment centers. Treatment of the disease remains unsatisfactory. All currently used drugs must be administered parenterally, treatment is lengthy, and adverse drug reactions frequent. There are currently no drugs that are easily administered and have low toxicity, and might thus be used as tools to support disease control.
This study aims to compare the safety and efficacy of DB289, a new, orally administered dication prodrug to pentamidine i.m. injection for the treatment of first stage sleeping sickness. The project will be executed in the framework of an international consortium consisting of several partners from academia, industry and from the Democratic Republic of Congo Ministries of Health.
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Inclusion criteria
The patient has early stage T. b. gambiense infection i.e. parasitologically confirmed infection in the blood or lymph node aspirate and greater than or equal to 5 WBC mm-3 detected in the CSF by microscopic examination
Patient is 15 to 50 years old
Patient has a minimal weight of 35 kilograms
If the patient is female of child bearing potential (a women will be considered of non-child bearing potential only if she has been post menopausal for over 2 years or has had a hysterectomy):
Patient has understood and signed the Informed Consent. If the patient is minor, a legal guardian has signed the Informed Consent
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
Masking
111 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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