Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Though still an endemic area, the incidence of tuberculosis (TB) in Taiwan is decreasing in recent years. Further reduction in TB incidence, or even elimination should rely on treatment for LTBI. However, which is the cost-effective screening method or what is the cost-effective regimen in Taiwan is still unclear.

Therefore, the investigators designed this prospective study to follow up adult household contacts with LTBI for 2 years and compare the efficacy of 9-month isoniazid and 4-month rifampicin).


Clinical Trial Description

In countries with a low incidence of tuberculosis (TB), most new, active cases have occurred among persons who were once infected, contained this infection, and then later developed active TB. Therefore, identifying persons with latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection (LTBI) followed by preventive therapy is an important strategy in public health for TB elimination. Until this decade, the diagnosis of LTBI had been based on contact investigation and tuberculin skin testing (TST). However, false-positive results are not uncommon due to its cross-reactivity with the bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine and some species of non-tuberculosis mycobacteria (NTM), and false-negative results can occur in at least 20% in immunocompromised hosts.

With the application of M. tuberculosis-specific antigens, current interferon-gamma release assays (IGRAs) have been shown to have a better sensitivity and specificity than TST for detecting host response to M. tuberculosis. Therefore, current guidelines for the diagnosis and management of latent tuberculosis infection recommend using IGRA to replace TST. Reports from recent studies comparing the sensitivity, specificity and availability, as well as cost-effective analysis for both tests are inconclusive. The best way varies in different areas, cultures and facilities. Therefore, collecting local data would be very helpful for policy making in public health.

Several regimens have been used in treating LTBI, including 9-month isoniazid, 4-month rifampin, 2-month rifampin plus pyrazinamide, and 3-month isoniazid plus rifampin. Among the 4 regimens, 2-month rifampin plus pyrazinamide has been reported to associate with unacceptable hepatotoxicity and even mortality due to hepatic failure. Therefore, this regimen has now been abandoned in treating LTBI. The treatment completion rate, adverse events, and reduction in risk of developing active TB are similar in 3-month isoniazid plus rifampin as in 6-month Isoniazid. At present, 9-month isoniazid is still the most popular regimen for LTBI, because the toxicity is low, the drug interaction is seldom, and isoniazid has been used for many years. However, the long treatment duration seriously compromises the completion rate. By contrast, rifampin is safe, cheap and more acceptable. Recent studies, including cost-effective analysis, favor using 4-month rifampin in treating LTBI. However, the outcome in these studies is completion rate of preventive therapy, rather than the event of developing active TB. In addition, some use statistic modeling rather conducting a clinical trial.

Though still an endemic area, the incidence of TB in Taiwan is decreasing in recent years. Further reduction in TB incidence, or even elimination should rely on treatment for LTBI. However, which is the cost-effective screening method or what is the cost-effective regimen in Taiwan is still unclear.

Therefore, the investigators designed this prospective study to follow up adult household contacts with LTBI for 2 years and compare the efficacy of 9-month isoniazid and 4-month rifampicin). ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01398618
Study type Interventional
Source National Taiwan University Hospital
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase Phase 3
Start date May 2011
Completion date December 2013

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04094012 - Risk of SDRs Under 3HP and 1HP Regimen for LTBI Phase 3
Completed NCT01582711 - Study 33: Adherence to Latent Tuberculosis Infection Treatment 3HP SAT Versus 3HP DOT Phase 3
Recruiting NCT06033807 - Active Screening of Latent Tuberculosis Infection in School Contacts of Active Tuberculosis Patients
Completed NCT01622140 - Prospective Comparison of the Tuberculin Skin Test and Interferon-Gamma Release Assays in Diagnosing Infection With Mycobacterium Tuberculosis and in Predicting Progression to Tuberculosis
Completed NCT00557765 - Use of a Gamma-IFN Assay in Contact Tracing for Tuberculosis in a Low-Incidence, High Immigration Area N/A
Completed NCT00463086 - Isoniazid Plus Antiretroviral Therapy to Prevent Tuberculosis in HIV-infected Persons N/A
Recruiting NCT00905970 - Demonstration of the Dynamic Hypothesis of Latent Tuberculosis Infection N/A
Recruiting NCT00449345 - Screening for Latent Tuberculosis in Healthcare Workers With Quantiferon-Gold Assay: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis N/A
Completed NCT02641106 - VDOT for Monitoring Adherence to LTBI Treatment N/A
Completed NCT00804713 - Screening for Latent Tuberculosis Infection (LTBI) in US Army Recruits N/A
Completed NCT01136161 - Clinical Trial to Investigate the Safety, Tolerability, and Immunogenicity of the Novel Antituberculous Vaccine RUTI® Following One Month of Isoniazid Treatment in Subjects With Latent Tuberculosis Infection Phase 2
Recruiting NCT03312647 - Adverse Drug Reactions to Anti-TB Drugs in the Treatment of Latent Tuberculosis Infection N/A
Completed NCT02810678 - Enhancing the Public Health Impact of Latent Tuberculosis (TB) Infection Diagnosis and Treatment N/A
Completed NCT01223534 - QuantiFERON®-TB Gold In-Tube for the Diagnosis of Tuberculosis Infection in Contact Tracing Study. Phase 4
Withdrawn NCT00558480 - Vitamin A Supplementation for Modulation of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Immune Responses in Latent Tuberculosis N/A
Recruiting NCT00692809 - Impact of HIV Infection on Latent Tuberculosis (TB) Among Patients With HIV-TB Co-infection N/A
Completed NCT03702049 - Nurse-Led Community Health Worker Adherence Model in 3HP Delivery Among Homeless Adults at Risk for TB Infection and HIV N/A
Terminated NCT01761201 - "Efficacy and Safety of Levofloxacin vs Isoniazid in Latent Tuberculosis Infection in Liver Transplant Patients". Phase 3
Completed NCT01608685 - Interferon Gamma Release Assays (IGRA) Testing Versus Tuberculin Skin Test in Renal Transplant Recipients N/A
Completed NCT01007396 - Diagnosis of Tuberculosis Infection in Health Care Workers Using Ex-vivo Interferon-gamma Assay N/A