Efficacy and safety of oral ibrexafungerp for the treatment of acute vulvovaginal candidiasis: a global phase 3, randomised, placebo-controlled superiority study (VANISH 306)

35Citations
Citations of this article
31Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of ibrexafungerp versus placebo for acute vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) treatment. Design: Global phase 3, randomised, placebo-controlled superiority study. Setting: Study sites in the USA (n = 19) and Bulgaria (n = 18). Population: Female patients aged ≥12 years with acute VVC and a vulvovaginal signs and symptoms (VSS) score ≥4 at baseline. Methods: Patients were randomly assigned 2:1 to ibrexafungerp (300 mg twice for 1 day) or placebo. Main outcome measures: The primary endpoint was the percentage of patients with a clinical cure (VSS = 0) at the test-of-cure visit (day 11 ± 3). Secondary endpoints included percentages of patients with mycological eradication, clinical cure and mycological eradication (overall success), clinical improvement (VSS ≤1) at test-of-cure visit, and complete resolution of symptoms at follow-up visit (day 25 ± 4). Results: At the test-of-cure visit, patients receiving ibrexafungerp had significantly higher rates of clinical cure (63.3% [119/188] versus 44.0% [37/84]; P = 0.007), mycological eradication (58.5% [110/188] versus 29.8% [25/84]; P < 0.001), overall success (46.1% [82/188] versus 28.4% [23/84]; P = 0.022) and clinical improvement (72.3% [136/188] versus 54.8% [46/84]; P = 0.01) versus those receiving placebo. Symptom resolution was sustained and further increased with ibrexafungerp (73.9%) versus placebo (52.4%) at follow-up (P = 0.001). Ibrexafungerp was generally well tolerated. Adverse events were primarily gastrointestinal and were mild to moderate in severity. Conclusions: Ibrexafungerp demonstrated statistical superiority over placebo for the primary and secondary endpoints. Ibrexafungerp is a promising novel, well-tolerated and effective oral 1-day treatment for acute VVC. Tweetable abstract: Ibrexafungerp is statistically superior to placebo for the treatment of vulvovaginal candidiasis.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Sobel, R., Nyirjesy, P., Ghannoum, M. A., Delchev, D. A., Azie, N. E., Angulo, D., … Sobel, J. D. (2022). Efficacy and safety of oral ibrexafungerp for the treatment of acute vulvovaginal candidiasis: a global phase 3, randomised, placebo-controlled superiority study (VANISH 306). BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 129(3), 412–420. https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-0528.16972

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free