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Letrazuril Sale

(Synonyms: 来曲珠利) 目录号 : GC31715

Letrazuril是双胍类的对映体类似物,是一种苯乙腈可用于预防和治疗家禽中的球虫感染。

Letrazuril Chemical Structure

Cas No.:103337-74-2

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10mM (in 1mL DMSO)
¥1,881.00
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1mg
¥937.00
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5mg
¥1,710.00
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10mg
¥2,925.00
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50mg
¥8,730.00
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100mg
¥14,850.00
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产品描述

Letrazuril is a p-fluor analogue of diclazuril which can be used in the prevention and treatment of coccidia infections in domestic fowl.

[1]. Blanshard C, et al. Pilot studies of azithromycin, letrazuril and paromomycin in the treatment of cryptosporidiosis. Int J STD AIDS. 1997 Feb;8(2):124-9.

Chemical Properties

Cas No. 103337-74-2 SDF
别名 来曲珠利
Canonical SMILES O=C(N1)N(N=CC1=O)C2=CC(Cl)=C(C(C3=CC=C(F)C=C3)C#N)C(Cl)=C2
分子式 C17H9Cl2FN4O2 分子量 391.18
溶解度 DMSO : ≥ 165 mg/mL (421.80 mM) 储存条件 Store at -20°C
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1 mg 5 mg 10 mg
1 mM 2.5564 mL 12.7818 mL 25.5637 mL
5 mM 0.5113 mL 2.5564 mL 5.1127 mL
10 mM 0.2556 mL 1.2782 mL 2.5564 mL
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Research Update

Treatment of human intestinal cryptosporidiosis: A review of published clinical trials

The global burden of diarrhea caused by Cryptosporidium parasite is underestimated. In immunocompromised hosts, chronic and severe presentation of intestinal cryptosporidiosis can result in long-term morbidity and high illness costs. The evidence of effective treatments for cryptosporidiosis has been lacking. We reviewed the published clinical trials to bring forward the feasible therapeutic options of human cryptosporidiosis in various populations and settings according to clinical improvement and parasite clearance rates. A total of 42 studies consisting of the use of nitazoxanide, paromomycin, macrolides, somatostatin analogues, letrazuril, albendazole, rifaximin, miltefosine, clofazimine, and colostrum were included in the review. The trials were mostly conducted in small number of individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and there is inadequate data of controlled trials to suggest the use of these treatment modalities. Nitazoxanide was reported to be highly efficacious only in immunocompetent hosts and was found to be superior to paromomycin in the same group of patients. Macrolides showed no effective results in both clinical and parasitological improvement. Human bovine colostrum should possibly be administered as one of complementary therapeutic modalities along with other antimicrobials to reach optimal parasite eradication. Other trials of therapeutic modalities were terminated due to futility. Currently, available data is intended to aid the development of strategies for improving access to treatments in different clinical settings, as well as to help guide further studies on treatments of human intestinal cryptosporidiosis.

A phase I study of letrazuril in AIDS-related cryptosporidiosis

Objective: The intestinal parasite Cryptosporidium is a common cause of chronic diarrhoea in AIDS patients and is responsible for significant morbidity and mortality. No effective treatment is currently available for this condition. Here we aim to determine the safety, tolerance, and clinical effect of letrazuril in the treatment of AIDS-related Cryptosporidiosis.
Design: A prospective, open-label study of letrazuril was performed.
Setting: The study was conducted at the Immune Deficiency Treatment Centre (IDTC) of Montreal General Hospital, a tertiary-care centre with inpatient and outpatient facilities.
Participants: All HIV-positive patients presenting to the IDTC between November 1991 and January 1993 who had symptomatic intestinal Cryptosporidiosis were enrolled in this protocol. Sixteen participants entered the study and 15 were available for evaluation, having completed at least 2 weeks on the study medication.
Interventions: Patients received letrazuril daily in escalating doses of 50 to 100 mg orally for 6 weeks. Clinical and laboratory evaluations were performed weekly during the treatment phase, with a follow-up evaluation 4 weeks after the end of this phase, for a total study period of 10 weeks.
Main outcome measures: Response to letrazuril was assessed by eradication of Cryptosporidial oocysts from the stool and symptomatic improvement in diarrhoea and abdominal pain. Haematological, biochemical, and electrocardiographic parameters were also studied to evaluate potential toxicities of the treatment.
Results: Fourteen evaluable patients had baseline CD4 lymphocyte counts ranging from 3 to 99 x 10(6)/l cells (mean, 30 x 10(6)/l cells). (The fifteenth evaluable patient had a CD4 count 235 x 10(6)/l.) Of these 14 patients, five showed a major response (symptomatic improvement and eradication of Cryptosporidial oocysts from the stool), two had a minor response (symptomatic improvement with persistence of oocysts in stool), and seven had no response to therapy with letrazuril. Seven patients developed a transient drug-related rash.
Conclusion: Fifty per cent of the AIDS patients in this study experienced an improvement in their Cryptosporidial disease while receiving letrazuril. No serious dose-related toxicities were observed. Larger Phase II trials are needed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of letrazuril in AIDS-associated intestinal Cryptosporidiosis.

Pilot studies of azithromycin, letrazuril and paromomycin in the treatment of cryptosporidiosis

Pilot studies of the safety and efficacy of 3 drugs thought to have anticryptosporidial activity were carried out to determine whether any of them are suitable for large-scale clinical trials. Open studies of the use of azithromycin, letrazuril and paromomycin in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and confirmed cryptosporidial diarrhoea for at least a month. Azithromycin 500 mg daily was ineffective. Letrazuril 150-200 mg daily was associated with an improvement in symptoms in 40% of patients treated and cessation of excretion of cryptosporidial oocysts in the stool in 70%; however biopsies remained positive. Paromomycin therapy was associated with a complete resolution of diarrhoea in 60% of patients treated and some improvement in symptoms in a further 5% but it did not eliminate the infection. None of the drugs had any major toxicities. Dose escalation studies of azithromycin should be performed. Letrazuril should be further investigated for efficacy in double-blind placebo-controlled trials. Paromomycin appears to result in prolonged symptomatic remission of cryptosporidial diarrhoea, but has no effect on cryptosporidial cholangitis.

Treatment with letrazuril of refractory cryptosporidial diarrhea complicating AIDS

Thirty-five AIDS patients (mean CD4 count 44 x 10(6)/L) with chronic cryptosporidiosis were treated with letrazuril at an initial oral daily dose of 50 mg in an open-label Phase I prospective trial. Treatment was continued for > or = 10 days and for as long as there was a response. The majority of subjects (91%), had previously failed paromomycin treatment. At baseline, 74% of patients had moderate (five to nine bowel movements per day) to severe (> 10 bowel movements per day) diarrhea. Twenty-three subjects (66%) had a clinical response within a mean of 1.7 weeks of treatment initiation. Twenty-two patients had a partial response (> 50% reduction in bowel movements per day for > or = 1 week), one patient had a complete response (two or fewer bowel movements per day). Of the responders, 15 (65%) had a clinical relapse with worsening diarrhea at an average of 1.2 months following initiation of letrazuril. The other eight (35%) had had symptom control for an average of 2.9 months from initiation of letrazuril to the latest follow-up. Microbiologic eradication was demonstrated in 10 (40%) of 25 patients with follow-up stool examinations. Seven patients (20%) experienced a rash, all within 1 week of starting the drug, and resolved in all patients when the drug was discontinued. In conclusion, severely immunocompromised AIDS patients with refractory cryptosporidiosis may show a modest, short-lived response to letrazuril. Microbiologic response is variable and relapse high. Rash is a major limiting side effect of the drug.

Successful treatment of cryptosporidiosis in an AIDS patient with letrazuril