Latent Tuberculosis Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
TBTC Study 33. An Evaluation of Adherence to Latent Tuberculosis Infection (LTBI) Treatment With 12 Doses of Once Weekly Rifapentine (RPT) and Isoniazid (INH) Given as Self-administered (SAT) Versus Directly-observed Therapy (DOT): iAdhere.
The study is an open label, multicenter, randomized (three arms: DOT (standard control),
SAT, SAT with SMS reminders) controlled clinical trial. The trial is conducted in patients
diagnosed with latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) who are recommended for treatment. The
primary objective is to evaluate adherence to a three-month (12-dose) regimen of weekly
rifapentine and isoniazid (3RPT/INH) given by directly observed therapy (DOT) compared to
self-administered therapy (SAT). The secondary objectives:
- To compare the treatment completion rates between participants randomized to SAT
without reminders versus SAT with weekly SMS reminders
- To evaluate the timing of doses and patterns of adherence to once weekly RPT/INH among
participants who complete treatment and those who discontinue therapy prior to
completion.
- To determine the availability and acceptability of using SMS reminders among all
patients consenting to participate in the study.
- To determine the toxicity and tolerability by comparing the rates of any drug-related
grade 3 or 4 adverse events or death between the DOT arm and the SAT arms (both
combined and individually)
- To compare the frequency, timing, and causes for failure to complete treatment between
the DOT arm and the SAT arms
- To collect patient-specific cost data related to the 3 treatment arms
- To describe the pattern of antituberculosis drug resistance among Mycobacterium
tuberculosis strains cultured from participants who develop active TB.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that approximately 2.3 billion people are
infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Approximately 1.7 million people die of TB each
year, the second most common infectious cause of death in the world. In order to improve TB
control worldwide, an affordable, effective, short course treatment for latent TB infection
(LTBI) is a global priority.
Candidates for LTBI treatment are those persons with a positive TST or IGRA, particularly if
they also have risk factors for progressing to active TB, including individuals likely to be
recently infected. The Prevent TB Study (TBTC Study 26) was an open-label, randomized, phase
III controlled clinical trial with over 8,000 high risk TST reactors enrolled. The study
compared rifapentine and INH (3RPT/INH) given once-weekly by directly observed treatment
(DOT) for 3 months (12 doses) compared with 9 months of daily, self-administered INH. The
results demonstrated the safety and efficacy of the shorter regimen. Moreover, the once
weekly therapy had significantly higher treatment completion rates than the standard 9 INH
regimen.
One of the most effective strategies for assuring adherence with therapy is to have each
dose of medication directly administered by a health care worker who observes and records
the ingestion of the drugs. DOT for active TB has been successfully used in many settings to
improve treatment completion, however cost and logistical constraints of DOT remain. The
estimated cost of giving 12 weekly DOT doses to all LTBI patients is likely prohibitive for
TB control programs worldwide. This may lead to a decreased uptake of the new regimen or
implementation using SAT where adherence has not been studied. Therefore, to apply the
Prevent TB study results more broadly, a new study evaluating treatment completion of 3
RPT/INH given as SAT is conducted.
Medication adherence is defined by whether patients take a treatment as prescribed. The
effectiveness of any treatment is determined largely by adherence. In clinical practice and
research, indirect measures of adherence are commonly used. Indirect measures of adherence
include patient self-report, evaluation of pharmacy dispensation records, pill counts, and
the use of electronic prescription bottle monitors. Patient self-reported adherence is
accurate when non-adherence is reported but tends to overestimate true adherence.
Self-report is not discerning enough to be utilized as a sole measure of adherence in
research settings where adherence is the primary outcome. Pill counts have been utilized
successfully in research and clinical settings for real-time assessment but also tend to
overestimate adherence. Electronic drug monitors such as the Medication Event Monitoring
System (MEMS) are the best available tools to assess the timing and patterns of adherence.
This study uses a combination of indirect measures including MEMS, pill counts, and
self-report to provide the most accurate assessment of adherence to once weekly,
self-administered RPT/INH.
The number of cellular phone users globally has increased dramatically in the last decade.
Cell phones and SMS reminders have been used successfully in randomized controlled clinical
trials to improve adherence to vaccines, HIV medications, and asthma treatment. SMS appear
to be cost-effective ways to reach patients in remote locations. This study examines effect
of SMS on medication adherence.
The goal of this open label clinical trial is to compare the adherence to 3RPT/INH given by
DOT versus SAT or SAT with a weekly SMS reminder. The primary assessment of adherence will
be treatment completion which is defined as taking at least 90% of the doses (11/12 doses of
each drug) within 16 weeks of initiation. Secondary objectives include evaluating the
patterns of adherence in participants who fail to complete, determining the feasibility and
impact of using SMS reminders on treatment completion with SAT, evaluating the tolerability
and any adverse events associated with each treatment arm, monitoring for the development of
active TB, determining the drug susceptibility for participants who develop active TB, and
measuring important patient-related expenditures associated with each study arm. The trial
will be conducted in patients diagnosed with LTBI and recommended for treatment.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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