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An open label, adaptive, phase 1 trial of high-dose oral nitazoxanide in healthy volunteers: an antiviral candidate for SARS-CoV-2

An open label, adaptive, phase 1 trial of high-dose oral nitazoxanide in healthy volunteers: an antiviral candidate for SARS-CoV-2
An open label, adaptive, phase 1 trial of high-dose oral nitazoxanide in healthy volunteers: an antiviral candidate for SARS-CoV-2

Repurposing approved drugs may rapidly establish effective interventions during a public health crisis. This has yielded immunomodulatory treatments for severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), but repurposed antivirals have not been successful to date because of redundancy of the target in vivo or suboptimal exposures at studied doses. Nitazoxanide is a US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved antiparasitic medicine, that physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling has indicated may provide antiviral concentrations across the dosing interval, when repurposed at higher than approved doses. Within the AGILE trial platform (NCT04746183) an open label, adaptive, phase I trial in healthy adult participants was undertaken with high-dose nitazoxanide. Participants received 1500 mg nitazoxanide orally twice-daily with food for 7 days. Primary outcomes were safety, tolerability, optimum dose, and schedule. Intensive pharmacokinetic (PK) sampling was undertaken day 1 and 5 with minimum concentration (C min ) sampling on days 3 and 7. Fourteen healthy participants were enrolled between February 18 and May 11, 2021. All 14 doses were completed by 10 of 14 participants. Nitazoxanide was safe and with no significant adverse events. Moderate gastrointestinal disturbance (loose stools or diarrhea) occurred in 8 participants (57.1%), with urine and sclera discoloration in 12 (85.7%) and 9 (64.3%) participants, respectively, without clinically significant bilirubin elevation. This was self-limiting and resolved upon drug discontinuation. PBPK predictions were confirmed on day 1 but with underprediction at day 5. Median C min was above the in vitro target concentration on the first dose and maintained throughout. Nitazoxanide administered at 1,500 mg b.i.d. with food was safe with acceptable tolerability a phase Ib/IIa study is now being initiated in patients with COVID-19.

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AGILE platform
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AGILE platform (2021) An open label, adaptive, phase 1 trial of high-dose oral nitazoxanide in healthy volunteers: an antiviral candidate for SARS-CoV-2. Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. (doi:10.1002/cpt.2463).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Repurposing approved drugs may rapidly establish effective interventions during a public health crisis. This has yielded immunomodulatory treatments for severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), but repurposed antivirals have not been successful to date because of redundancy of the target in vivo or suboptimal exposures at studied doses. Nitazoxanide is a US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved antiparasitic medicine, that physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling has indicated may provide antiviral concentrations across the dosing interval, when repurposed at higher than approved doses. Within the AGILE trial platform (NCT04746183) an open label, adaptive, phase I trial in healthy adult participants was undertaken with high-dose nitazoxanide. Participants received 1500 mg nitazoxanide orally twice-daily with food for 7 days. Primary outcomes were safety, tolerability, optimum dose, and schedule. Intensive pharmacokinetic (PK) sampling was undertaken day 1 and 5 with minimum concentration (C min ) sampling on days 3 and 7. Fourteen healthy participants were enrolled between February 18 and May 11, 2021. All 14 doses were completed by 10 of 14 participants. Nitazoxanide was safe and with no significant adverse events. Moderate gastrointestinal disturbance (loose stools or diarrhea) occurred in 8 participants (57.1%), with urine and sclera discoloration in 12 (85.7%) and 9 (64.3%) participants, respectively, without clinically significant bilirubin elevation. This was self-limiting and resolved upon drug discontinuation. PBPK predictions were confirmed on day 1 but with underprediction at day 5. Median C min was above the in vitro target concentration on the first dose and maintained throughout. Nitazoxanide administered at 1,500 mg b.i.d. with food was safe with acceptable tolerability a phase Ib/IIa study is now being initiated in patients with COVID-19.

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cpt.2463
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 October 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 October 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452366
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452366
ISSN: 0009-9236
PURE UUID: 978be8e7-e9ed-4f7f-87f3-27e49ccbeec4
ORCID for Karen Martin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6362-0501
ORCID for Sean Ewings: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7214-4917
ORCID for Gareth Griffiths: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9579-8021

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 08 Dec 2021 18:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: Lauren E. Walker
Author: Richard FitzGerald
Author: Geoffrey Saunders
Author: Rebecca Lyon
Author: Michael Fisher
Author: Karen Martin ORCID iD
Author: Izabela Eberhart
Author: Christie Woods
Author: Sean Ewings ORCID iD
Author: Colin Hale
Author: Rajith Kr Rajoli
Author: Laura Else
Author: Sujan Dilly-Penchala
Author: Alieu Amara
Author: David G Lalloo
Author: Michael Jacobs
Author: Henry Pertinez
Author: Parys Hatchard
Author: Robert Waugh
Author: Megan Lawrence
Author: Lucy Johnson
Author: Keira Fines
Author: Helen Reynolds
Author: Timothy Rowland
Author: Rebecca Crook
Author: Emmanuel Okenyi
Author: Kelly Byrne
Author: Pavel Mozgunov
Author: Thomas Jaki
Author: Saye Khoo
Author: Andrew Owen
Author: Thomas E Fletcher
Corporate Author: AGILE platform

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