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Paromomycin for Individuals With Uncomplicated Cutaneous Leishmaniasis

Paromomycin Topical Cream Treatment Protocol for Individuals With Uncomplicated Cutaneous Leishmaniasis

Status
NO_LONGER_AVAILABLE
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Expanded Access
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01641796
Enrollment
Unknown
Registered
2012-07-17
Start date
Unknown
Completion date
Unknown
Last updated
2020-05-15

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous

Keywords

Cutaneous Leishmaniasis, CL, Lesion, Topical, Treatment, Cream, Expanded Access

Brief summary

This is an expanded access treatment protocol designed to provide a topical cream treatment option to military health care beneficiaries with parasitologically confirmed uncomplicated Cutaneous Leishmaniasis.

Detailed description

When a military health care beneficiary presents at a Department of Defense Military Treatment Facility with a skin lesion clinically and epidemiologically consistent with suspicious Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (CL), routine diagnostic parasitology testing will be performed as standard of care, and if there is a positive diagnosis, the patient will be offered the option to participate in this treatment program and after providing written informed consent/assent., if eligible to participate, the patient will receive treatment with Paromomycin Topical Cream. Eligible patients will receive Paromomycin Topical Cream applied topically to all CL lesions once daily for 20 days. The Day 1 application will be performed by or under the supervision of the site PI. The Day 2 application will be performed by the patient while being observed by the site PI or a designated medical staff member. The patient will be scheduled to return to an Medical Treatment Facility (MTF) weekly during treatment at Days 7 ± 2, 14 ± 2, and Day 20 + 4 days (the last day of treatment). During these visits, a member of the medical team will observe the application of the cream by the patient and will assist the patient, if necessary. In addition, the patient will be scheduled to return for a safety evaluation approximately 1 week after completing treatment. The patient will be instructed to contact the site PI or designee if any unusual adverse events (AEs) occur during treatment or in the week after completing treatment. The patient will be scheduled to return to the MTF on Day 90 (± 14 days) days after starting treatment to determine whether all CL lesions have healed (as per CL standard of care). Those patients who cannot return to an MTF will be contacted by phone. If at any time after completing treatment the lesions get worse or appear to be infected, the patient will be instructed to go to an MTF for possible treatment of AEs or alternative treatments for CL.

Interventions

Paromomycin Topical Cream applied to all lesions once a day for 20 days

Sponsors

U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command
Lead SponsorFED

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL

Inclusion criteria

* Male or female military health care beneficiary of any age. * Diagnosis of uncomplicated CL by having at least one lesion parasitologically confirmed by at least one of the following methods: 1) positive culture for promastigotes; 2) microscopic identification of amastigotes in stained lesion tissue; and/or 3) PCR assay performed either at the LDL, WRAIR or the Clinical Parasitology Service, CDC. * Ability to comprehend and willingness to sign informed consent or give assent * CL lesions in a location amenable to topical treatment * Patient is willing to forgo other treatments for CL while on treatment program * Females of childbearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test within 1 day of starting treatment and agree to use an acceptable method of birth control from start of treatment until 2 weeks after completing treatment

Exclusion criteria

* Clinically significant concomitant disease that would preclude the patient from completing treatment in the opinion of the treating physician. * Clinical Evidence of mucosal involvement * Known allergy to aminoglycosides * Females who are pregnant or breastfeeding

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026