SINGLE-DOSE AMPICILLIN-SULBACTAM VERSUS CEFTRIAXONE AS TREATMENT FOR UNCOMPLICATED GONORRHEA IN A UGANDAN STD CLINIC POPULATION WITH A HIGHPREVALENCE OF PPNG INFECTION
Ns. Hellmann et al., SINGLE-DOSE AMPICILLIN-SULBACTAM VERSUS CEFTRIAXONE AS TREATMENT FOR UNCOMPLICATED GONORRHEA IN A UGANDAN STD CLINIC POPULATION WITH A HIGHPREVALENCE OF PPNG INFECTION, Journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 98(2), 1995, pp. 95-100
During the period November 1989 to March 1991 a total of 330 patients
(269 males and 61 females) with signs and symptoms of uncomplicated lo
wer genital tract infections with Neisseria gonorrhoeae were treated a
t a sexually transmitted disease clinic in Kampala, Uganda. Patients w
ere randomized for treatment with either intramuscular ampicillin/sulb
actam (1 g ampicillin/0.5 g sulbactam), plus 1 g probenecid orally, or
ceftriaxone (250 mg). In those cases where N. gonorrhoeae was isolate
d and the patients returned for a follow-up visit, 70/74 (95%) of the
patients treated with ampicillin/sulbactam and 71/72 (99%) of those tr
eated with ceftriaxone had favourable clinical outcomes. All 24 patien
ts with penicillinase-producing N. gonorrhoeae (PPNG) treated with amp
icillin/sulbactam had a favourable clinical outcome compared with 95%
(20/21) of those with PPNG treated with ceftriaxone. The infecting pat
hogen was eradicated in 65/71 (92%) of the evaluable patients treated
with ampicillin/sulbactam and in 60/63 (95%) of the ceftriaxone group.
Both drug regimens were well tolerated and there were no reports of a
dverse drug effects. In summary, in a predominantly male group of clin
ic patients in Kampala, Uganda, ampicillin/sulbactam was as safe and e
ffective as ceftriaxone in treating uncomplicated gonococcal infection
s of the lower genital tract caused by either PPNG or non-PPNG strains
.