N. Khanna, R. Dalby, A. Connor
Jun 1, 2008
Citations
0
Influential Citations
24
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Abstract
Objectives: This safety study of terameprocol (also called M4N, EM-1421) daily vaginal application in healthy women explores its potential application as a microbicide in interrupting human immunodeficiency virus sexual transmission and additional interruption of human papillomavirus and herpes simplex virus transmission. Methods: A double-blind placebo controlled phase I repeat dose tolerability and pharmacokinetic, crossover study of 90 mg terameprocol (2% w/w ointment) administered intravaginally for 7 consecutive days in healthy female subjects. The pharmacokinetics after administration was examined on days 1 and 7 of dosing. Subjects underwent vaginal examination following the 6-hour pharmacokinetic sample on day 7 of each study period. Results: Recruitment started January 2006 and ended May 2006, and 14 subjects completed the study. Median age was 24 years. No treatment-related serious adverse events were reported, and there were a total of 17 treatment-emergent adverse events (AE) reported by 11 participants. The most common AE was headache. Terameprocol was not detectable in serum in pharmacokinetic samples. Conclusions: Terameprocol was well tolerated at a 90 mg dose (2% wt/wt) administered vaginally daily for 7 days. No serious adverse events occurred and any AEs were mild. The excellent safety profile supports future clinical trial to evaluate the application of intravaginal terameprocol in women.