PLoS Medicine (Oct 2024)

Safety of single-dose bedaquiline combined with rifampicin for leprosy post-exposure prophylaxis: A Phase 2 randomized non-inferiority trial in the Comoros Islands.

  • Bouke Catherine de Jong,
  • Said Nourdine,
  • Auke Thomas Bergeman,
  • Zahara Salim,
  • Silahi Halifa Grillone,
  • Sofie Marijke Braet,
  • Mohamed Wirdane Abdou,
  • Rian Snijders,
  • Maya Ronse,
  • Carolien Hoof,
  • Achilleas Tsoumanis,
  • Nimer Ortuño-Gutiérrez,
  • Christian van der Werf,
  • Alberto Piubello,
  • Aboubacar Mzembaba,
  • Younoussa Assoumani,
  • Epco Hasker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1004453
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 10
p. e1004453

Abstract

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BackgroundTo reduce leprosy risk in contacts of patients with leprosy by around 50%, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends leprosy post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) using single-dose rifampicin (SDR). Results from a cluster randomized trial in the Comoros and Madagascar suggest that PEP with a double dose of rifampicin led to a similar reduction in incident leprosy, prompting the need for stronger PEP. The objective of this Phase 2 trial was to assess safety of a bedaquiline-enhanced PEP regimen (intervention arm, bedaquiline 800 mg with rifampicin 600 mg, BE-PEP), relative to the WHO recommended PEP with rifampicin 600 mg alone (control arm, SDR-PEP).Methods and findingsFrom July 2022 to January 2023, consenting participants were screened for eligibility, including a heart rate-corrected QT interval (QTc) 50 ms or exceeded 450 ms after PEP administration. Per protocol, all children were analyzed together, with no significant difference in mean QTc increase for BE-PEP compared to SDR-PEP, although non-inferiority of BE-PEP in children was not demonstrated in unadjusted analysis, as the upper limit of the 95% CI of 10.4 ms exceeded the predefined margin of 10 ms. Adjusting for baseline QTc, the regression coefficient and 95% CI (3.3; -1.4, 8.0) met the 10 ms non-inferiority margin. No significant differences in ALT or AST levels were noted between the intervention and control arms, although a limitation of the study was false elevation of ALT/AST during adult recruitment due to a technical error. In both study arms, one serious adverse event was reported, both considered unlikely related to the study drugs. Dizziness, nausea, headache, and diarrhea among adults, and headaches in children, were nonsignificantly more frequently observed in the BE-PEP group.ConclusionsIn this study, we observed that safety of single-dose bedaquiline 800 mg in combination with rifampicin is comparable to rifampicin alone, although non-inferiority of QTc changes was demonstrated in children only after adjusting for the baseline QTc measurements. A Phase 3 cluster randomized efficacy trial is currently ongoing in the Comoros.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT05406479.