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Clinical Trial Summary

Tuberculosis (TB) is a common, infectious, bacterial disease that is spread when an infected person transmits their saliva through the air by coughing or sneezing. Despite the availability and effectiveness of affordable six-month treatments for tuberculosis (TB), the worldwide control of this disease is currently being impacted by the emergence of multidrug resistant TB (MDR-TB). MDR-TB refers to TB that is resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampicin. These are the two most powerful first-line drugs used to treat pulmonary TB. MDR-TB usually develops while a person is taking TB treatment due to either inappropriate treatment or failure of patients to comply with their treatment. This strain of drug-resistant bacteria can also be spread to other people through the air. With the incident rate of MDR-TB on the rise, there is a need to investigate optimal treatment regimens using effective drugs.


Clinical Trial Description

The STREAM study is an international, multi-centre, parallel-group, open-label, randomised, controlled trial in patients with multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) including patients with rifampicin-resistant and isoniazid-sensitive TB. Background and Rationale: In 2011, World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines for the treatment for MDR-TB recommended an intensive phase of treatment based on at least four drugs known to be effective and given for a minimum of 20 months; this is referred to as the WHO 2011 long regimen. Outcomes with this approach are generally poor. In the most recent WHO TB surveillance report only 50% of MDR-TB patients were successfully treated and a recent meta-analysis reported on average 62% successful outcome and a mortality of 11%. In 2010, Van Deun et al (2010) reported excellent long-term outcomes in a cohort of over 200 patients in Bangladesh with MDR-TB who were treated with a regimen given for only nine to 11 months. Such a regimen, if successful, would represent a considerable advance over current practice. Evaluation of this regimen is the objective of Stage 1 of STREAM. In 2016, following review of the available data, the WHO MDR TB treatment guidelines were modified to recommend a 9-12 month shortened regimen under specific conditions similar to Regimen B used in STREAM Stage 1 (referred to as the WHO 2016 short regimen). Bedaquiline is a novel diarylquinoline antibiotic with bactericidal activity. In a phase II trial of patients with MDR-TB time to culture conversion was significantly less in patients receiving bedaquiline compared to those receiving an optimised background regimen only (Diacon et al (2012). In December 2012 the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved bedaquiline as part of the treatment regimen for MDR-TB when other agents are unavailable. Stage 2 of STREAM was designed to investigate ways in which Regimen B could be improved either by removing the second-line injectable, which is associated with severe drug toxicity, or by shortening the regimen to 6 months. Treatments that are evaluated within the STREAM trial include: Regimen A The locally-used MDR-TB regimen in accordance with 2011 WHO MDR-TB treatment guidelines. Regimen B is based on the regimen described by Van Deun 2010. At the start of STREAM this consisted of clofazimine, ethambutol, moxifloxacin, and pyrazinamide given for 40 weeks, supplemented by isoniazid, kanamycin, and prothionamide in the first 16 weeks (intensive phase). ); this combination is referred to as Regimen Bmox. With Version 8.0 of the protocol Regimen B is modified by replacement of moxifloxacin with levofloxacin (referred to as Regimen Blev). Regimen B without specification of which fluoroquinolone is in the regimen refers to either (Bmox or Blev). Regimen C is a 40-week all-oral regimen consisting of bedaquiline, clofazimine, ethambutol, levofloxacin, and pyrazinamide given for 40 weeks supplemented by isoniazid and prothionamide for the first 16 weeks (intensive phase). Regimen D is a 28-week regimen consisting of bedaquiline, clofazimine, levofloxacin, and pyrazinamide given for 28 weeks supplemented by isoniazid and kanamycin for the first 8 weeks (intensive phase). The primary objectives of the STREAM2 trial are: To assess whether the proportion of participants with a favourable efficacy outcome at week 76 on Regimen C is non-inferior to that on Regimen B Study Population: Stage 2 will aim to randomise at least 200 patients to each of Regimens B and C. All patients will be followed up to Week 132. The primary analysis will be based on the data accrued to Week 76 and is based on the proportion of patients with a favourable outcome at that time point ; the data accrued to Week 132 will be used in secondary analyses. Although the STREAM study is an open-label study, wherever possible it will be conducted masked to treatment allocation. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02409290
Study type Interventional
Source IUATLD, Inc
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
Start date March 2016
Completion date May 2, 2023

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