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Pulmonary TB clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Pulmonary TB.

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NCT ID: NCT04645836 Completed - TB Clinical Trials

Impact of a Pharmacist-led Patient-centred Care Intervention Along With Text-Message Reminders, on the Management of Newly Diagnosed Tubercular Patients: a Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial'.

Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to standardize the management of "Pharmaceutical care with the two-way text messages and incentive for mobile usage during the treatment for tuberculosis patients, to improve the outcomes and compliance, reduce the risk of transmission and to evaluate the patient perspective in terms of their quality of life, shared decision making and satisfaction with services provided.

NCT ID: NCT03722472 Completed - Pulmonary TB Clinical Trials

Phase 1 Clinical Trial of Single-Vial ID93 + GLA-SE in Healthy Adults

Start date: October 2, 2018
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a phase 1, double-blind, randomized clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of single-vial lyophilized ID93 + GLA-SE compared to the two-vial presentation consisting of lyophilized ID93 and liquid GLA-SE administered as two IM injections in healthy adult subjects (aged 18 - 55).

NCT ID: NCT03678688 Completed - Pulmonary TB Clinical Trials

A Phase 1/2 Trial of Multiple Oral Doses of OPC-167832 for Uncomplicated Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: October 18, 2018
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This trial will evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and efficacy of multiple oral doses of OPC-167832 in participants with uncomplicated, smear-positive, drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis (TB).

NCT ID: NCT02961569 Completed - Pulmonary TB Clinical Trials

Comparison Between Two Strategies for the Diagnosis of TB

Start date: July 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Tuberculosis (TB) is a major cause of death among the "communicable" diseases in the world. Pulmonary TB, the main localization, leads to the dissemination of cases. An earlier diagnosis of contagious pulmonary TB is a cornerstone to stop the air transmission. The aim of the study will be to compare two strategies, in patients with a chest-X-ray in favour of contagious pulmonary TB: the classical strategy of sputa collection during three consecutive early mornings, versus the studied strategy of sputa collection at hour h, hour h+1, hour h+2 during the first early morning.

NCT ID: NCT00933790 Completed - HIV Infection Clinical Trials

Comparing Daily vs Intermittent Regimen of ATT in HIV With Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: September 14, 2009
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

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.

NCT ID: NCT00212550 Completed - Pulmonary TB Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Practice of Three Morning Sputa on Separate Days for Diagnosis of Mtb

Start date: November 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Obtain sputum smears within one day to rule out TB