Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://sgc.anlis.gob.ar/handle/123456789/2684
Título: New regimens of benznidazole for the treatment of chronic Chagas disease in adult participants in indeterminate form or with mild cardiac progression (NuestroBen study): protocol for a phase III randomised, multicentre non-inferiority clinical trial
Outros títulos: New regimens of benznidazole for the treatment of chronic Chagas disease in adult participants in indeterminate form or with mild cardiac progression (NuestroBen study): protocol for a phase III randomised, multicentre non-inferiority clinical trial
Autor(es): Marques, Tayná 
Forsyth, Colin 
Barreira, Fabiana 
Lombas, Carola 
Blum de Oliveira, Bethania 
Laserna, Mónica 
Molina, Israel 
Del Carmen Bangher, Maria 
Fernández, Rosmiro Javier 
Lloveras, Susana C. 
Fernandez, Marisa 
Scapellato, Pablo G. 
Patterson, Patricia 
Garcia, Wilson 
Ortiz, Lourdes 
Schijman, Alejandro 
da Cruz Moreira, Otacilio 
Garcia, Lineth 
Garcia, Lineth 
Longhi, Silvia A 
Vaillant, Michel 
Tipple, Craig 
Fraisse, Laurent 
Silvestre Sousa, Andrea 
Sosa Estani, Sergio 
Pinazo, Maria-Jesús 
Palavras-chave: Argentina;Enfermedad de Chagas;America Latina;Nitroimidazoles;Bolivia;Índice de Severidad de la Enfermedad;Tripanocidas;Enfermedades Desatendidas;Factores de Tiempo;Nifurtimox;Bioética;Parasitología;México
Data do documento: 2025
Resumo: 
Chagas disease (CD) is one of the most
neglected diseases in the world. In Latin America, CD is
endemic in 21 countries, with an estimated 70 million
people at risk of infection. Current treatments are limited
to two nitroheterocyclic compounds: nifurtimox and
benznidazole (BZN). Each has significant limitations,
including long duration and safety concerns. However,
data from recently completed studies suggest that
reduced-duration
regimens may be equally effective while
enhancing safety.
Methods and analysis NuestroBen is a phase III,
randomised, multicentre clinical trial designed to assess
whether shorter (2- and 4-week)
regimens of BZN are
non-inferior
to the standard 8-week
treatment. A total of
540 adult participants with no evidence of organ damage
(the indeterminate form) or with mild cardiac progression
(mild electrocardiographic alterations and without systolic
dysfunction or symptoms), all in the chronic phase of CD,
will be recruited at six study sites in Argentina and two
study sites in Bolivia. Participants will be randomised to
receive one of the two shortened regimens of BZN (300 mg
per day for 2 or 4 weeks) or standard treatment (300 mg
per day for 8 weeks). The primary endpoint is sustained
elimination of parasitaemia from the end of treatment
through 12 months of follow-up.
Secondary endpoints
will assess sustained clearance of parasitaemia at 1, 4,
6 and 8 months of follow-up
from the end of treatment,
drug tolerability and adherence to treatment. NuestroBen
will also evaluate whether two shortened regimens of BZN improve drug
tolerability and treatment adherence compared with the current standard
treatment while maintaining efficacy in participants with the indeterminate
form of CD or with mild cardiac involvement.
Ethics and dissemination In Argentina, this study was approved
by Fundación de Estudios Farmacológicos y Medicamentos ‘Luis M.
Zieher’ for its conduct at the Instituto de Cardiología de Corrientes
‘Juana Francisca Cabral’ (reference: NuestroBen-2020/
2021) and the
Instituto Nacional de Parasitología ‘Dr. Mario Fatala Chaben’ (reference:
NuestroBen-2020/
2021) by Comité Institucional de Ética de Investigación
en Salud for the Centro de Chagas y Patología Regional de Santiago
del Estero (reference: NuestroBen-2020-
088/
2021), by Comité de Ética
en Investigación for the Hospital de Infecciosas F.J. Muñiz (reference:
NuestroBen-2020–
4037) and the Hospital General de Agudos D.F.
Santojanni (reference: NuestroBen-2020–
4039) and by Comité de
Bioética for the Fundación Huésped (reference: NuestroBen-2020/
2021).
In Bolivia, it was approved by Comité de Ética en Investigación en
Salud from the Universidad Autónoma Juan Misael Saracho (reference:
NuestroBen-2020/
2025). All participants are asked to provide written
informed consent to participate. Recruitment processes started in July
2023, and as of 15 June 2025, 140 participants have been recruited.
Findings will be shared with Argentinian and Bolivian public health officials
and with the Chagas and tropical medicine communities via international
conferences. Findings will also be published in medical journals.
URI: http://sgc.anlis.gob.ar/handle/123456789/2684
DOI: 10.1136/ bmjopen-2024-098079
Aparece nas Coleções:Publicaciones INP

Arquivos neste item:
Arquivo Descrição TamanhoFormato
10.1136bmjopen-2024-098079.pdf369.39 kBAdobe PDFVer/Aberto
Mostrar registro completo do item

Google ScholarTM

Checar

Altmetric

Altmetric


Os itens no repositório estão protegidos por copyright, com todos os direitos reservados, salvo quando é indicado o contrário.