Objective: To compare zaldaride maleate, a calmodulin inhibitor with gastrointestinal antisecretory properties, with loperamide and a placebo in the treatment of travellers' diarrhoea.
Design: Randomized, double-blind, double-dummy study.
Setting: Study clinic staffed by European residents on Nile cruise ships.
Patients: Tourists (n = 436) who acquired travellers' diarrhoea during the Nile cruise.
Interventions: (1) Zaldaride 20 mg four times daily, (2) zaldaride 2 x 20 mg as initial loading dose followed by three doses of 20 mg on the first day and four doses of 20 mg on the second day, (3) loperamide 2 x 2 mg loading dose following by a flexible dosage of 2 mg after each unformed stool (maximum of 16 mg daily), (4) placebo.
Main outcome measures: Number of unformed stools, rate of improvement of patients with diarrhoea, rate of relief from diarrhoea.
Results: Among the 331 compliant and fully evaluated patients, the zaldaride with loading dose group showed no significant differences in cure rates from the loperamide group. For most parameters, zaldaride without a loading dose and the placebo resulted in significantly lower cure rates.
Conclusions: A zaldaride regimen including a loading dose was shown to be well tolerated and as effective as loperamide.