Official Title

The Mycotic Ulcer Treatment Trial II: A Randomized Trial Comparing Oral Voriconazole vs Placebo
  • Phase

    Phase 3
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Intervention/Treatment

    voriconazole ...
  • Study Participants

    240
The purpose of this study is to determine if the addition of oral voriconazole to topical treatment regimens results in lower rates of perforation in severe fungal corneal ulcers.
Fungal corneal ulcers tend to have very poor outcomes with commonly used treatments. There has only been a single randomized trial of anti-fungal therapy for mycotic keratitis, and no new ocular anti-fungal medications have been approved by the FDA since the 1960s. The triazole voriconazole has recently become the treatment of choice for systemic fungal infections such as pulmonary aspergillosis. The use of topical ophthalmic preparations of voriconazole has been described in numerous case reports, however there has been no systematic attempt to determine whether it is more or less clinically effective than natamycin. Additionally, there have been many case reports of the use of oral voriconazole in the treatment of fungal corneal ulcers, however there has been no systematic attempt to determine if it improves outcomes in severe ulcers.

This study is a randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled trial to determine if the use of oral voriconazole in severe ulcers reduces the rate of perforations. 240 fungal corneal ulcers with baseline visual acuity worse than 6/120 presenting to the Aravind Eye Hospitals and the UCSF Proctor Foundation will be randomized to receive oral voriconazole plus topical voriconazole and topical natamycin, or oral placebo plus topical voriconazole and topical natamycin. The primary outcome is the rate of perforation over the three month follow-up period.
Study Started
May 31
2010
Primary Completion
Jan 31
2016
Study Completion
Mar 31
2016
Results Posted
Jun 14
2017
Last Update
Feb 26
2019

Drug Voriconazole

1% voriconazole (topical) plus 0.01% preservative, 1 drop applied to the affected eye every one hour while awake for 1 week, then every 2 hours while awake until three weeks after enrollment. 5% natamycin (topical), 1 drop applied to the affected eye every one hour while awake for 1 week, then every 2 hours while awake until three weeks after enrollment. 400 mg BID PO on study day one (loading dose), then 200 mg BID PO until 3 weeks from enrollment for patients weighing greater than 50 kg. For patients 40-50 kg, the loading dose is 300 mg BID PO on study day 1, then 150 mg BID PO until 3 weeks from enrollment. For patients weighing <40 kg, the loading dose is 200 mg BID PO, then 100 mg BID PO until 3 weeks after enrollment.

Drug Placebo

1% voriconazole (topical) plus 0.01% preservative, 1 drop applied to the affected eye every one hour while awake for 1 week, then every 2 hours while awake until three weeks after enrollment. 5% natamycin (topical), 1 drop applied to the affected eye every one hour while awake for 1 week, then every 2 hours while awake until three weeks after enrollment. Two tablets BID PO on study day one, then one tablet BID PO until 3 weeks from enrollment.

Oral Voriconazole Active Comparator

Placebo Placebo Comparator

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Presence of a corneal ulcer at presentation
Evidence of filamentous fungus on smear (KOH wet mount, Giemsa, or Gram stain)
Visual acuity worse than 6/120 (20/400, logMAR 1.3)
The patient must be able to verbalize a basic understanding of the study after it is explained to the patient, as determined by physician examiner. This understanding must include a commitment to return for follow-up visits.
Willingness to be treated as an inpatient or to be treated as an outpatient and return every 3 days +/- 1 day until re-epithelialization and every week to receive fresh medication for 3 weeks
Appropriate consent

Exclusion Criteria:

Evidence of bacteria on Gram stain at the time of enrollment
Evidence of acanthamoeba by stain
Evidence of herpetic keratitis by history or exam
Corneal scar not easily distinguishable from current ulcer
Age less than 16 years (before 16th birthday)
Bilateral ulcers
Previous penetrating keratoplasty in the affected eye
Pregnancy (by history or urine test) or breast feeding (by history)
Known liver disease, including hepatitis or cirrhosis (Child-Pugh A-C)
Acuity worse than 6/60 (2/200) in the fellow eye (note that any acuity, uncorrected, corrected, pinhole, or BSCVA 6/60 or better qualifies for enrollment)
Acuity better than 6/120 (20/400) in the study eye (note that any acuity, uncorrected, corrected, pinhole, or BSCVA can be used for enrollment)
Currently on rifampin, rifabutin, ritonavir, long acting barbiturates, phenytoin, carbamazepine, or other drugs known to interact with voriconazole
Known allergy to study medications (antifungal or preservative)
No light perception in the affected eye
Not willing to participate

Summary

Placebo

Oral Voriconazole

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term Placebo Oral Voriconazole

Incidence of Perforation or Therapeutic Penetrating Keratoplasty

Hazard ratio of perforation or therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty (TPK) comparing voriconazole to placebo

Oral Voriconazole

0.0095562
New perforations or TPK/person-days

Oral Placebo

0.011204
New perforations or TPK/person-days

Best Spectacle-corrected logMAR Visual Acuity

Best spectacle-corrected logMAR visual acuity at 3 months after enrollment, adjusting for enrollment BSCVA and treatment arm in a multiple linear

Oral Voriconazole

0.7852594
logMAR (Mean)
Standard Error: .1083858

Oral Placebo

0.787141
logMAR (Mean)
Standard Error: .1646131

Best Spectacle-corrected logMAR Visual Acuity at 3-weeks

Best spectacle-corrected logMAR visual acuity at 3 weeks after enrollment, adjusting for enrollment BSCVA and treatment arm in a multiple linear

Oral Voriconazole

0.8745454
logMAR (Mean)
Standard Error: .1080198

Oral Placebo

0.744252
logMAR (Mean)
Standard Error: .0964871

Size of Infiltrate/Scar - 3 Months

Size of infiltrate/scar at 3 months after enrollment, using enrollment infiltrate scar/size as a covariate

Oral Voriconazole

0.9319315
mm^2 (Mean)
Standard Error: .06508

Oral Placebo

0.697005
mm^2 (Mean)
Standard Error: .0927

Size of Infiltrate/Scar

Size of infiltrate/scar at 3 weeks after enrollment, using enrollment infiltrate scar/size as a covariate

Oral Voriconazole

0.2192398
mm^2 (Mean)
Standard Error: .1663

Oral Placebo

0.7973467
mm^2 (Mean)
Standard Error: .073885

Hazard Ratio for Re-epithelialization

Hazard Ratio of re-epithelialization comparing the treatment groups

Oral Voriconazole

0.0141123
Number re-epthelialized/person-days

Oral Placebo

0.0130862
Number re-epthelialized/person-days

Microbiological Cure at 7 Days

Fungal Culture negative at 7 days post treatment

Placebo

Oral Voriconazole

Number of Adverse Events

Comparing the number of serious and non-serious adverse events by treatment arm.

Oral Voriconazole

58.0
adverse events

Placebo

28.0
adverse events

Minimum Inhibitory Concentration of Isolates - Natamycin

Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) of isolates to natamycin by treatment arm

Oral Voriconazole

12.0
mg/L (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 4.0 to 32.0

Placebo

4.0
mg/L (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 4.0 to 16.0

Minimum Inhibitory Concentration of Isolates - Voriconazole

Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) of isolates to voriconazole by treatment arm

Oral Voriconazole

1.0
mg/L (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 0.5 to 4.0

Placebo

2.0
mg/L (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 0.5 to 4.0

Total

240
Participants

Age, Continuous

54
years (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 45.0 to 60.0

Weight (lbs)

108
lbs (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 97.0 to 121.0

Age, Categorical

Region of Enrollment

Sex: Female, Male

3-week Followup Visit

Placebo

Oral Voriconazole

3-month Follow-up Visit

Placebo

Oral Voriconazole

Drop/Withdrawal Reasons

Placebo

Oral Voriconazole