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Diflucan
Clinical Pharmacology
Diflucan
Oral fluconazole has been shown to be active in an animal model of vaginal candidiasis.
Concurrent administration of fluconazole and amphotericin B in infected normal and immunosuppressed mice showed the following results: a small additive antifungal effect in systemic infection with C. albicans, no interaction in intracranial infection with Cr. neoformans, and antagonism of the two drugs in systemic infection with Asp. fumigatus. The clinical significance of results obtained in these studies is unknown.
There have been reports of cases of superinfection with Candida species other than C. albicans, which are often inherently not susceptible to DIFLUCAN (e.g., Candida krusei). Such cases may require alternative antifungal therapy.
Clinical Studies
Cryptococcal meningitis
In a multicenter study comparing DIFLUCAN (200 mg/day) to amphotericin B (0.3 mg/kg/day) for treatment of cryptococcal meningitis in patients with AIDS, a multivariate analysis revealed three pretreatment factors that predicted death during the course of therapy: abnormal mental status, cerebrospinal fluid cryptococcal antigen titer greater than 1:1024, and cerebrospinal fluid white blood cell count of less than 20 cells/mm³. Mortality among high risk patients was 33% and 40% for amphotericin B and DIFLUCAN patients, respectively (p=0.58), with overall deaths 14% (9 of 63 subjects) and 18% (24 of 131 subjects) for the 2 arms of the study (p=0.48). Optimal doses and regimens for patients with acute cryptococcal meningitis and at high risk for treatment failure remain to be determined. (Saag, et al. N Engl J Med 1992; 326:83-9.)
Vaginal candidiasis
Two adequate and well-controlled studies were conducted in the U.S. using the 150 mg tablet. In both, the results of the fluconazole regimen were comparable to the control regimen (clotrimazole or miconazole intravaginally for 7 days) both clinically and statistically at the one month post-treatment evaluation.
The therapeutic cure rate, defined as a complete resolution of signs and symptoms of vaginal candidiasis (clinical cure), along with a negative KOH examination and negative culture for Candida (microbiologic eradication), was 55% in both the fluconazole group and the vaginal products group.
| Fluconazole PO 150 mg tablet | Vaginal Product qhs x 7 days | |
| Enrolled | 448 | 422 |
| Evaluable at Late Follow-up | 347 (77%) | 327 (77%) |
| Clinical cure | 239/347 (69%) | 235/327 (72%) |
| Mycologic erad. | 213/347 (61%) | 196/327 (60%) |
| Therapeutic cure | 190/347 (55%) | 179/327 (55%) |
Approximately three-fourths of the enrolled patients had acute vaginitis (<4 episodes/12 months) and achieved 80% clinical cure, 67% mycologic eradication and 59% therapeutic cure when treated with a 150 mg DIFLUCAN tablet administered orally. These rates were comparable to control products. The remaining one-fourth of enrolled patients had recurrent vaginitis (≥4 episodes/12 months) and achieved 57% clinical cure, 47% mycologic eradication and 40% therapeutic cure. The numbers are too small to make meaningful clinical or statistical comparisons with vaginal products in the treatment of patients with recurrent vaginitis.
Substantially more gastrointestinal events were reported in the fluconazole group compared to the vaginal product group. Most of the events were mild to moderate. Because fluconazole was given as a single dose, no discontinuations occurred.
| Parameter | Fluconazole PO | Vaginal Products |
| Evaluable patients | 448 | 422 |
| With any adverse event | 141 (31%) | 112 (27%) |
| Nervous System | 90 (20%) | 69 (16%) |
| Gastrointestinal | 73 (16%) | 18 ( 4%) |
| With drug-related event | 117 (26%) | 67 (16%) |
| Nervous System | 61 (14%) | 29 ( 7%) |
| Headache | 58 (13%) | 28 ( 7%) |
| Gastrointestinal | 68 (15%) | 13 ( 3%) |
| Abdominal pain | 25 ( 6%) | 7 ( 2%) |
| Nausea | 30 ( 7%) | 3 ( 1%) |
| Diarrhea | 12 ( 3%) | 2 (<1%) |
| Application site event | 0 ( 0%) | 19 ( 5%) |
| Taste Perversion | 6 ( 1%) | 0 ( 0%) |
Pediatric Studies
Oropharyngeal candidiasis
Generic Name: Fluconazole
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