BACKGROUND
The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of ceftriaxone and benzathine penicillin G (BPG) in nonpregnant, immunocompetent adults with early syphilis because there is a lack of clinical evidence supporting ceftriaxone as an alternative treatment for early syphilis without an human immunodeficiency virus coinfection.
METHODS
A randomized, open-label controlled study evaluating the efficacy of ceftriaxone and BPG was conducted in 4 hospitals in Jiangsu Province. Treatment comprised either ceftriaxone (1.0 g, given intravenously, once daily for 10 days) or BPG (2.4 million units, given intramuscularly, once weekly for 2 weeks). A serological response was defined as a ≥4-fold decline in the rapid plasma reagin (RPR) titer.
RESULTS
In all, 301 patients with early syphilis were enrolled in this study; 230 subjects completed the follow-ups. The serological response at 6 months of follow up was observed in 90.2% in ceftriaxone group and 78.0% in BPG group (P = .01). There was no significant difference between treatment groups in patients with primary or early latent syphilis, but among patients with secondary syphilis the difference was highly significant (95.8% vs 76.2%; P < .01). Moreover, patients exhibiting a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction after treatment might have a shorter period before a serological response (P = .03).
CONCLUSIONS
In this study, ceftriaxone regimen was noninferior to the BPG regimen in nonpregnant, immunocompetent patients with early syphilis.
CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION
ChiCTR-TQR-13003624.