Reducing exacerbations in children and adults with primary ciliary dyskinesia using erdosteine and/or azithromycin therapy (REPEAT trial): study protocol for a multicentre, double-blind, double-dummy, 2×2 partial factorial, randomised controlled trial

Author:

Chang Anne BORCID,Morgan Lucy C,Duncan Emma L,Chatfield Mark D,Schultz André,Leo Paul J,McCallum Gabrielle B,McInerney-Leo Aideen M,McPhail Steven M,Zhao Yuejen,Kruljac Catherine,Smith-Vaughan Heidi C,Morris Peter S,Marchant Julie M,Yerkovich Stephanie T,Cook Anne L,Wurzel Danielle,Versteegh Lesley,O’Farrell Hannah,McElrea Margaret SORCID,Fletcher Sabine,D'Antoine Heather,Stroil-Salama Enna,Robinson Phil J,Grimwood Keith

Abstract

IntroductionPrimary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare, progressive, inherited ciliopathic disorder, which is incurable and frequently complicated by the development of bronchiectasis. There are few randomised controlled trials (RCTs) involving children and adults with PCD and thus evidence of efficacy for interventions are usually extrapolated from people with cystic fibrosis. Our planned RCT seeks to address some of these unmet needs by employing a currently prescribed (but unapproved for long-term use in PCD) macrolide antibiotic (azithromycin) and a novel mucolytic agent (erdosteine). The primary aim of our RCT is to determine whether regular oral azithromycin and erdosteine over a 12-month period reduces acute respiratory exacerbations among children and adults with PCD. Our primary hypothesis is that: people with PCD who regularly use oral azithromycin and/or erdosteine will have fewer exacerbations than those receiving the corresponding placebo medications. Our secondary aims are to determine the effect of the trial medications on PCD-specific quality-of-life (QoL) and other clinical outcomes (lung function, time-to-next exacerbation, hospitalisations) and nasopharyngeal bacterial carriage and antimicrobial resistance.Methods and analysisWe are currently undertaking a multicentre, double-blind, double-dummy RCT to evaluate whether 12 months of azithromycin and/or erdosteine is beneficial for children and adults with PCD. We plan to recruit 104 children and adults with PCD to a parallel, 2×2 partial factorial superiority RCT at five sites across Australia. Our primary endpoint is the rate of exacerbations over 12 months. Our main secondary outcomes are QoL, lung function and nasopharyngeal carriage by respiratory bacterial pathogens and their associated azithromycin resistance.Ethics and disseminationOur RCT is conducted in accordance with Good Clinical Practice and the Australian legislation and National Health and Medical Research Council guidelines for ethical conduct of Research, including that for First Nations Australians.Trial registration numberACTRN12619000564156.

Funder

MRFF/NHMRC

NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence

NHMRC

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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