During the clinical trials 8,861 patients have been treated with ciprofloxacin worldwide. 3,822 of the therapeutic courses were valid for analysis of efficacy according to FDA standards. The following dosages were usually administered: UTI: 100 to 500 mg twice daily orally or 100 mg twice daily intravenously; RTI: 250 to 1000 mg twice daily orally or 200 mg twice daily intravenously; septicemia: 200 mg intravenously twice daily; gonorrhea: 250 to 500 mg single tablet orally; all other infections: 500 to 1000 mg twice daily orally or 200 mg twice daily intravenously. Ciprofloxacin was administered to 762 courses of lower RTI, 88 courses of upper RTI, 108 courses of bacteremia, 766 courses of skin structure infection, 142 courses of bone and joint infections, 149 courses of intra-abdominal infections, 33 courses of gastrointestinal infections, 1,633 courses of UTI, 49 courses of pelvic infections, 279 courses of STD, mainly gonorrhea, and three courses of meningitis. The clinical response was resolution in 76%, improvement in 18% and failure in only 6%. Bacteriologic response by all sites evaluable: pathogens were eradicated from 74%, markedly reduced in 2%, persisted in 10%. Relapse occurred in 4% and reinfection was observed in another 6%. The overall response was favourable for 90% of the patients. Drug safety was established on a data base of 8,861 courses worldwide. The following side-effects according to COSTART terminology were observed: digestive 5%, metabolic nutritional 4.6%, central nervous 1.6%, skin 1.4%, hemic and lymphatic 1%, cardiovascular 0.4%, body as a whole 0.4%, urogenital 0.3%, special senses 0.3%, musculo-skeletal 0.1%, respiratory 0.08%. Several courses had more than one reaction. Thus the total incidence of side-effects for the treated patient population was 10.2%. Ciprofloxacin is a highly effective drug and a breakthrough in several areas of medical interest. It is relatively safe and side-effects are usually mild or moderate in intensity and transient.
80 adult outpatients suffering from otitis media, sinusitis (maxillaris or frontalis) or peritonsillitis were treated with 500 mg ciprofloxacin b.i.d. (n = 40) or with 2 g penicillin V t.i.d. (n = 40). The patients were randomly allocated. Three groups of patients resulted, clinically and bacteriologically evaluable, or only clinically evaluable because the isolated strains were resistant to ciprofloxacin or penicillin V or because no strains were isolated. Ciprofloxacin was superior to penicillin V; there were fewer resistant strains (one compared to 11), and the eradication rate (57% compared to 43%) as well as the clinical efficacy (60% compared to 48%) of ciprofloxacin were better than those of penicillin V--even in a daily dose of 6.0 g. Both treatments were well tolerated; side effects were neither reported nor found.
30/30 patients with lower UTI were enrolled in a randomized study to compare ciprofloxacin (250 mg/b.i.d.) and cefalexin (1 g/t.i.d.). In addition, 59 patients with cefalexin-resistant bacterial strains were treated in an open study arm. Ciprofloxacin showed convincingly better clinical and bacteriological efficacy than cefalexin. Both antibiotics were well tolerated. Ciprofloxacin has proved to be superior to cefalexin in the treatment of lower UTI.
In a prospective pharmacokinetic study the serum and tissue concentrations of ciprofloxacin (Bay O9867), a new carboxyquinolone antimicrobial agent were studied. 22 patients were given 300 mg ciprofloxacin i. v. before the operation (group A), and 19 patients were premedicated with 500 mg ciprofloxacin orally twice daily for three days followed by 300 mg i. v. preoperatively. Tissue samples weighing approximately 2 g were taken from the fallopian tubes, the ovaries, the fundus myometrium and the cervix. Ciprofloxacin concentrations were measured biologically by the cup plate agar diffusion method. Ciprofloxacin concentrations in serum and gynecological tissues were within the same range in both groups. Maximal serum concentrations of 6 and 4 mg/l, respectively, were recorded immediately after infusion. After 2 h serum concentrations ranged from 0.6 to 1.3 mg/l in both groups. At the same time, the tissue concentrations ranged from 0.62 to 3.3 mg/kg, indicating that tissue levels exceed corresponding serum concentrations. On average ciprofloxacin is concentrated in the extravascular space two-fold, as compared to the corresponding serum concentrations. There is no drug accumulation. The tissue concentrations obtained provide a full antibacterial coverage for gynecological infections, since the MIC for the most pathogenic bacteria is less than 1 mg/l.
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