This is a randomized clinical trial designed to evaluate oral nitazoxanide compared to a placebo in the treatment of acute uncomplicated influenza in adults. We hypothesize that treatment with nitazoxanide will reduce the duration of symptoms in patients with confirmed influenza infection. Secondarily, we hypothesize that treatment with nitazoxanide will reduce the complications of influenza, severity of symptoms, time lost from work, time to return to normal daily activities, and viral shedding.
The study is conducted at approximately 25 sites in the United States. Subjects selected based on symptoms will be randomized to receive oral nitazoxanide or placebo twice daily for 5 days. Subjects will be monitored by daily by telephone or home visit to monitor symptoms and complications of influenza for safety and will be referred for medical care as required. Subjects will complete a diary twice daily to record the presence and severity of symptoms, ability to perform normal daily activities and time lost from work. Complications of influenza (including sinusitis, otitis, bronchitis, pneumonia, central nervous system disease) and other adverse events will be reported. Nasopharyngeal swabs will be collected at Baseline (Day 0) and Day 7 for all patients and on Days 1 through 4 for a subset of patients to test for influenza A (including novel H1N1), influenza B and 17 other respiratory viruses by RT-PCR and culture and to evaluate quantitative viral shedding. The primary analysis will be for patients with confirmed influenza, and secondary analyses will be conducted for subjects with any respiratory virus and for all treated subjects.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
79
Tablet, 500 mg with food twice daily for 5 days
Tablet, twice daily with food for 5 days
Health Sciences Research Center at Asthma and Allergy Associates, P.C.
Elmira, New York, United States
Time to Resolution of All Clinical Symptoms of Influenza (Subjects With Confirmed Influenza Infection)
Time frame: Up to 28 days
Time to Resolution of All Clinical Symptoms of Influenza (Subjects Infected With Any Respiratory Virus)
Time frame: Up to 28 days
Time to Resolution of All Clinical Symptoms of Influenza (All Treated Subjects)
Time frame: Up to 28 days
Time to Return to Normal Daily Activity (Subjects With Confirmed Influenza)
Time frame: Up to 28 days
Overall Severity of Disease Score
Subjects recorded a severity score for 10 flu symptoms on a 0-3 scale BID for 7-14 days.The severity score for each symptom was multiplied by the number of hours scored at that severity for the entire time the subject maintained a diary (a sneezing score of 1 for 12 hours and 0 for 10 hours =1\*12 + 0\*10=12). This is symptom severity score\*hours.Symptom severity score\*hours for each of the symptoms were added for an overall symptom severity score\*hours (if symptom severity score\*hours for 10 symptoms were 12, 10, 9, 8, 7, 10, 10, 10, 5, 5, overall symptom severity score\*hours=86).Overall symptom severity score\*hours were divided by the number of hours that the subject kept a diary for a standardized continuous measure of severity of the course of illness (if overall symptom severity score\*hours=86 and the subject maintained a diary for 100 hours Overall Severity of Disease Score=0.86). Overall Severity of Disease Score can range 0-30 with higher scores indicating more severe symptoms.
Time frame: Up to 14 days
Time Lost From Work (Subjects With Confirmed Influenza)
Time frame: Up to 28 days
Complications of Influenza Including Secondary Illnesses, Antibiotic Use and Hospitalizations (Subjects With Confirmed Influenza)
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Time frame: Up to 28 days
Time to Cessation of Viral Shedding (Subjects With Confirmed Influenza)
Time frame: 28 days
Change in Influenza Virus Titer Assessed by Quantitative RT-PCR (Subjects With Confirmed Influenza)
Time frame: 4 days