A phase 2, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-ranging study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of orally administered VT-1161 in the treatment of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis - 23/05/18
, Thorsten P. Degenhardt, PhD a, Karen Person, MSc a, Jack D. Sobel, MD b, Paul Nyirjesy, MD c, Robert J. Schotzinger, MD, PhD a, Amir Tavakkol, PhD, DipBact aAbstract |
Background |
Lanosterol demethylase is an enzyme that is essential for fungal growth and catalyzes an early step in the biosynthetic pathway of ergosterol, which is a sterol that is required for fungal cell membrane formation and integrity. Lanosterol demethylase is the molecular target of the class of drugs referred to as “azole antifungals.” VT-1161 is a novel, oral, selective inhibitor of fungal lanosterol demethylase and is being developed for the treatment of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis.
Objective |
We evaluated the efficacy and safety of 4 dosing regimens of oral VT-1161 compared with placebo in women with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, which was defined as at least 3 symptomatic episodes of acute vulvovaginal candidiasis within a 12-month period.
Study Design |
Two hundred fifteen women with a documented history of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis and who, at screening, were experiencing an episode of acute vulvovaginal candidiasis (acute vulvovaginal candidiasis; composite vulvovaginal signs and symptoms score of ≥3 and a positive potassium hydroxide test for yeast) were enrolled. After treatment of the acute infection with fluconazole, subjects were assigned randomly to 1 of 5 treatment regimens: (1) VT-1161 150 mg once daily for 7 days, then 150 mg once weekly for 11 weeks, followed by a once-weekly dose of placebo for 12 weeks; (2) VT-1161 300 mg once daily for 7 days, then 300 mg once weekly for 11 weeks, followed by a once-weekly dose of placebo for 12 weeks; (3) VT-1161 150 mg once daily for 7 days, then 150 mg once weekly for 23 weeks; (4) VT-1161 300 mg once daily for 7 days, then 300 mg once weekly for 23 weeks; or (5) a matching placebo regimen for 24 weeks. The primary efficacy outcome was the proportion of subjects with ≥1 culture-verified acute vulvovaginal candidiasis episodes through week 48.
Results |
In the intent-to-treat population, the proportion of subjects with ≥1 acute vulvovaginal candidiasis episodes ranged from 0–7% across the 4 VT-1161 arms vs 52% in the placebo arm, with all arms achieving statistical significance vs placebo. VT-1161 was well-tolerated with a favorable safety profile, and the incidence of adverse events was lower in all VT-1161 arms compared with placebo. In addition, no patient in any VT-1161 arm discontinued the study early because of an adverse event or laboratory abnormality. There was also no evidence of an adverse effect of VT-1161 on liver function or electrocardiogram recordings.
Conclusion |
In this study, VT-1161 was shown to be efficacious and safe in the treatment of patients with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis. These data strongly support further clinical investigation of VT-1161 for the treatment of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : antifungal, Candida, VT-1161, vulvovaginal candidiasis
Plan
| Supported by Viamet Pharmaceuticals Inc (S.R.B., T.P.D., K.P., R.J.S., and A.T. are employees). J.D.S. and P.N. participated as Principal Investigators and are consultants to Viamet Pharmaceuticals; J.D.S. is also a consultant for and has received research funding from Cidara Therapeutics, Symbiomix Therapeutics, NovaDigm, Scynexis and Perrigo; P.N. is also a consultant for and has received research funding from Symbiomix Therapeutics, Cidara Therapeutics. |
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| Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, www.clinicaltrials.gov/, Identifier: NCT02267382 |
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| The authors report no conflict of interest. |
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| Cite this article as: Brand SR, Degenhardt TP, Person K, et al. A phase 2, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-ranging study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of orally-administered VT-1161 in the treatment of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2018;218:624.e1-9. |
Vol 218 - N° 6
P. 624.e1-624.e9 - juin 2018 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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