Latent Tuberculosis Clinical Trial
— 2R2Official title:
2R2: Higher Dose Rifampin for 2 Months vs Standard Dose Rifampin for Latent TB: a 3-arm Randomized Trial.
Rationale: Shorter regimens of high dose daily rifampin may be safe, and as effective as the standard rifampin regimen when taken for 4 months to treat latent TB (LTBI). However, there is insufficient evidence on the optimal dose of rifampin that has similar efficacy as the standard 4-month rifampin regimen without jeopardizing safety or affecting completion rates. Objectives: The general purpose of this study is to determine if rifampin at double or triple the standard dose for 2 months is as safe and effective as the standard dose of rifampin when taken for 4 months to treat latent tuberculosis (TB). Treatment: Persons who need treatment for latent TB, will be given rifampin, either at the standard dose (10mg/kg/day) for 4 months (control arm); or at double dose (20mg/kg/day) for 2 months (intervention arm 1); or at triple dose (30mg/kg/day) for 2 months (intervention arm 2). Design: This is 1:1:1 randomized, phase 2b, partially blind, controlled trial. The two higher doses (intervention arms) will be administered double-blind: participants and providers will be aware of the duration of their regimen, but they will both remain blinded to the specific dose (i.e. 20 or 30 mg/kg/day) for those randomized to 2-months regimens. All members of the same household of a patient with newly diagnosed active pulmonary TB will be randomized together (i.e. cluster randomized). Population and setting: Adults and children aged 10 years and above, who have latent TB infection and are recommended by their doctor to take treatment for latent TB can participate in the study. The planned number of persons with latent TB to recruit is about 1359 in total (or about 453 for each of the three arms). The study will take place in 6 sites: four in Canada (Calgary, Edmonton, Montreal and Vancouver), one in Indonesia (Bandung) and one in Viet Nam (1 clinic in Ho Chi Min City and 3 clinics in Ha Noi). Outcomes: Primary outcomes are: 1) Treatment completion and 2) Safety (i.e. grade 3-5 adverse events). Secondary outcomes are: 1) Safety (i.e. grade 1-2 adverse events) and 2) Efficacy (i.e. rates of active TB in the 26 months post-randomization). More information on how outcomes are defined is provided in the detailed description below.
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 1368 |
Est. completion date | December 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | January 31, 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 10 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Adults, and children aged 10 and older who weigh at least 25kg. - Evidence of latent TB infection: positive tuberculin skin test (5mm or greater or 10mm or greater, based on National guidelines) or positive interferon gamma release assay. - Eligible to take latent TB treatment according to Canadian guidelines in the Canadian sites, and according to World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines in the international sites (this includes household contacts, other contacts, HIV infected, other causes of immune suppression, fibronodular disease on chest-x ray (CXR), or other indication). Exclusion Criteria: - Children aged 0-9 and children aged 10 or older who weigh less than 25kg - Pregnancy - Baseline AST or ALT that is at least 3 times higher than upper limit of normal - Baseline Grade 3-4 abnormalities of hematological tests (WBC, platelets or hemoglobin). - Prior treatment for latent or active TB. - Rifampin contra-indicated - due to potential drug interactions that are considered too important, or difficult to manage, by health care provider; or due to history of allergy/ hypersensitivity to rifampin, rifabutin or rifapentine. - Household contacts of index TB patients with confirmed, or suspected rifampin resistant TB. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Unviversity of Calgary | Calgary | Alberta |
Canada | The Governors of the University of Alberta | Edmonton | Alberta |
Canada | MUHC | Montreal | Quebec |
Canada | BCCDC TB clinic | Vancouver | British Columbia |
Indonesia | Universitas Padjadjaran, Klinik Penelitian Tuberculosis (TB research clinic) | Bandung | |
Vietnam | Hai Ba Trung District Health Center, No. 16B | Hà N?i | |
Vietnam | Hanoi Lung Hospital | Hà N?i | |
Vietnam | Nam Tu Liem District Health Center, No. 3 | Hà N?i | |
Vietnam | Phoi Viet TB and Respiratory Diseases Clinic. | Ho Chi Minh City |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre | Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) |
Canada, Indonesia, Vietnam,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Treatment completion (taking 80% of doses within 120% of allowed time) | Completion will be defined as taking 80% of doses within 120% of allowed time (48 doses within 72 days for the two-month regimens, and 96 doses within 144 days for the 4-month regimen). | 2 months from randomization for participants in the two intervention arms and 4 months for the control arm. | |
Primary | Safety measured by Grade 3 to 5 adverse events | Grade 3 to 5 adverse events (and Grade 1-2 rash) which result in permanent discontinuation of the study drug, and that are considered probably or possibly related to the study drug by the majority of a three-member independent and blinded Adverse Events panel. | 2 months plus 2 weeks in the intervention arms; 4 months plus 2 weeks in the control arm. | |
Secondary | Safety measured by Grade 1 to 2 adverse events | Grade 1 to 2 adverse events which result in permanent discontinuation of the study drug and are considered probably or possibly related to the study drug by the adverse events panel. | 2 months plus 2 weeks in the intervention arms; 4 months plus 2 weeks in the control arm. | |
Secondary | Efficacy measured during follow-up visits and telephone calls | Active TB - symptoms will be ascertained monthly by direct questioning during treatment phase follow-up visits, and by telephone call every 3 months up to 26 months after randomization. | 26 months from randomization in all arms. |
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