View clinical trials related to Tuberculosis, Pulmonary.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of food on pharmacokinetic profile of multiple doses orally administered first-line anti-tuberculosis drugs in subjects with pulmonary tuberculosis.
The trial will evaluate the extended bactericidal activity of 14 consecutive days of oral administration of PA-824 at 50, 100, 150 and 200 mg per day in adult patients with newly diagnosed, uncomplicated, smear positive tuberculosis (TB). A control group will receive standard TB treatment.
The purpose of the study is whether the provision of tuberculosis care using volunteer community health workers or self-administered treatment for 7 months is equally effective with the existing 8 months of TB care in public health facilities by health workers. Patient care by volunteer community health workers and 7 months of self-administered treatment are more patient-convenient delivery options than the ongoing TB care in health facility.
Acquired Rifampicin Resistance has emerged as an important issue in the treatment of HIV-TB patients. It has not been a major problem in HIV-negative individuals treated for TB treated with standard intermittent regimens. The study would generate data on the efficacy of daily and thrice weekly regimen of ATT in pulmonary TB patients with HIV in the presence of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Not many trials have compared sputum conversion and adverse drug reaction between daily and intermittent regimens of ATT in HIV positive patients. This study provides a unique opportunity for comparison of daily and intermittent therapy for HIV patients with pulmonary TB looking into multiple dimensions of HIV-TB treatment namely efficacy, drug resistance, toxicity , drug interaction and immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome. The primary outcome of the study is to compare the efficacy of three anti-TB regimens in a) reducing bacteriological failures and b) decreasing the emergence of Acquired Rifampicin Resistance (ARR). The secondary outcomes include unfavourable responses (clinical failures, deaths, relapses) as whole, treatment emergent adverse drug reactions, pharmacokinetic levels of ATT and incidence of immune reconstitution syndrome.
Several case report showed that the co-infection of Mycoplasma pneumoniae in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis. The aim of this study is to elucidate the prevalence and its clinical significance of co-infection of Mycoplasma pneumonia in patients with newly diagnosed pulmonary tuberculosis.
REMoxTB is a study for the "Rapid Evaluation of Moxifloxacin in the treatment of sputum smear positive tuberculosis". REMoxTB aims to find and evaluate new drugs and regimens that shorten the duration of tuberculosis therapy. The purpose of REMoxTB is to evaluate the efficacy, safety and acceptability of two moxifloxacin-containing treatment combinations to determine whether substituting ethambutol with moxifloxacin in one combination, and/or substituting isoniazid with moxifloxacin in another combination, makes it possible to reduce the duration of treatment for TB.
N-acetyltransferase2 (NAT2) and Cytochrome P4502E1 (CYP2E1) are two drug metabolizing enzymes. Antituberculosis drug isoniazid is acetylated by NAT2 and forms ultimately a nontoxic compound which is metabolized by CYP2E1 to a toxic metabolite. Slow acetylator genotype of NAT2 and wild type genotype of CYP2E1 gene has been attributed to greater toxicity of ATT drug. Therefore this study has been designed to analyze the genetic polymorphism of NAT2 and CYP2E1 genes in tuberculosis patients who developed drug induced hepatitis upon administration of antituberculosis drug.Polymorphism study of NAT2 and CYP2E1 gene may help in predicting the high risk group of ATT induced hepatitis.
The goal of this Phase 2 study is to determine the microbiological activity and safety of rifapentine when given as a component of multidrug intensive phase treatment of smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). Funding Source- FDA Office of Orphan Products Development (OOPD)
The purpose of this study is to see if involving community health workers improves tuberculosis case finding and treatment outcome.
A recent trial in adults has demonstrated that zinc (Zn) and other Multiminerals (MN) combined, but neither of them alone, significantly increased weight gain during Tuberculosis (TB) treatment. There was a substantially larger beneficial effect on survival amongst those who received the combination of Zn and MN compared with those who received either Zn alone or MN alone. These exciting preliminary findings require further confirmation, as the data on mortality reduction was based on a post-hoc subgroup-analysis. Effects of MN and Zn supplementation has not been assessed in children with TB. Studies are urgently needed to evaluate the therapeutic potential of nutritional interventions on treatment outcome in children with TB. Simple and inexpensive nutritional interventions may substantially impact TB-related child morbidity and mortality in high-burden settings. The investigators thus, propose a randomized, double blind, controlled trial that will measure the effect of multi-vitamin/mineral supplementation on the efficacy of anti-TB treatment in newly diagnosed childhood pulmonary TB patients in Delhi.