A 10-day course of penicillin is the antibiotic regimen currently recommended by the American Heart Association (AHA) as treatment for patients with tonsillitis caused by group A beta-haemolytic streptococci (GABHS), with the aim of preventing both the suppurative and non-suppurative complications of this infection. This prospective, multicentre, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy clinical trial was undertaken in order to compare the efficacy of, tolerability of and compliance with a 5-day course of cefotiam hexetil (CTM) 200 mg bd with that of a 10-day course of penicillin V (PEV) 1 megaunit (600 mg) tds, to investigate the significance of recovering GABHS during or after treatment and to evaluate the potential economic advantages of short-term regimens. Two hundred and fifty ambulatory adult patients with a presumptive diagnosis (based on a positive rapid antigen detection test) of GABHS tonsillitis were recruited in 60 centres; the diagnosis was subsequently confirmed by a positive culture of a throat swab. At the time of entry into the trial there was no statistically significant difference between the groups in terms of clinical symptoms. In an intention-to-treat analysis, both the clinical and bacteriological response rates at days 10 and 30 were comparable for each group i.e. 106 of 119 (89.1%) patients and 90 of 109 (82.6%) patients respectively in the CTM group and 103 of 117 (88.0%) patients and 92 of 107 (86.0%) patients respectively in the PEV group. The times until defervescence and resolution of symptoms were also similar. Of the 115 patients in each group who were assessed at day 90, there were three clinical relapses in the CTM group and seven in the PEV group. No non-suppurative complications of GABHS infection were detected. Tolerance was significantly better in the CTM group than in the PEV group, 14 of 119 (11.8%) patients and 26 of 117 (22.2%) patients in the former and latter groups respectively reporting adverse events. In three cases in each group treatment was discontinued prematurely because of adverse events; none of these in the CTM group was serious but one patient in the PEV group experienced a severe allergic reaction. Compliance in both groups was good during the first 5 days of therapy but, by the end of each course, 93.6% of patients in the CTM group had completed treatment, compared with 73.0% in the PEV group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Cefotiam hexetil is a prodrug of cefotiam. The concentrations of cefotiam in plasma and sinus secretions were determined in 18 patients (10 males, 8 females, aged 39.3 +/- 13.0 years) with chronic sinusitis. All patients received two 200 mg oral doses of cefotiam hexetil 12 h apart and were divided into four groups according to the time which elapsed between the last dose and collection of secretion samples. The last dose was given 2 h (group I), 3 h (group II), 4 h (group III) or 6 h (group IV) before sinus puncture. Cefotiam concentrations were measured by high-pressure liquid chromatography and microbiological assay, results being very similar with both methods. Mean concentrations of cefotiam with the standard deviation in sinus exudates were 1.04 +/- 0.60 mg/l at 2 h (n = 6), 1.04 +/- 0.33 mg/l at 3 h (n = 4), 0.75 +/- 0.74 mg/l at 4 h (n = 4) and < 0.10 mg/l at 6 h (n = 4). Mean sinus fluid concentrations were higher than mean plasma concentrations in all groups. These results suggest that cefotiam concentrations higher than the MICs for common pathogens are found in sinus secretions up to 4 h after oral administration of cefotiam hexetil.
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