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Pulmonary Tuberculosis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Pulmonary Tuberculosis.

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NCT ID: NCT01215851 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Evaluation of Early Bactericidal Activity in Pulmonary Tuberculosis With(J-M-Pa-Z)

Start date: October 2010
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The trial will evaluate the extended bactericidal activity of 14 consecutive days of oral administration of TMC207 alone, TMC207 with pyrazinamide, TMC207 with PA-824, PA-824 with pyrazinamide and PA-824 with moxifloxacin and pyrazinamide, as determined by the rate of change of log CFU in sputum over the time period Day 0-14 in participants with smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). A control group will receive standard treatment.

NCT ID: NCT01215110 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Evaluation of Early Bactericidal Activity in Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: April 2010
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The trial will evaluate the extended bactericidal activity of 14 consecutive days of oral administration of TMC207 at multiple doses as determined by the rate of change of logCFU in sputum over the time period Day 7-14 in participants with smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). A control group will receive standard treatment.

NCT ID: NCT01154959 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Latency in Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: February 2010
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The immune responses in latent tuberculosis are poorly understood. While it is difficult to define the onset of latency during natural infection, patients undergoing treatment for tuberculosis are driven into a state of latency or cure. The present study on the effect of 3 and 4 month regimens containing moxifloxacin in sputum smear and culture positive pulmonary tuberculosis (TRC Study number 24) offers us the opportunity to study definitive immune responses pre and post treatment. We will evaluate a variety of innate and adaptive immune responses in patients before and after treatment and our study will compare the differences in immuno-phenotype (eg. Markers of T, B and NK cell activation, proliferation and regulatory phenotype) and function (eg. Production of cytokines, proliferative responses to TB antigens) at different time points following treatment. In addition, since a small percentage of patients will undergo relapse following treatment, the kinetics of immune responses in these patients will used to assess immunological predictors of relapse in tuberculosis.

NCT ID: NCT01011543 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Induced Sputum Versus Bronchoscopy in Smear Negative Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: August 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomised study that compares different diagnostic approaches for diagnosing pulmonary tuberculosis in patients suspected of pulmonary tuberculosis in whom the three classic (non-induced) sputum samples didn't show tuberculous bacillus on direct examination. The investigators compare the sensibility of induced sputum technique with an endoscopic approach (CT-scan followed by BAL and fluoroscopy-guided transbronchial biopsies and eventually sputum collection immediately after the bronchoscopy). People in high risk population for tuberculosis undergoing screening by chest X-ray or symptomatic patients will be admitted to the hospital if their chest X-ray shows a suspicion of active tuberculosis. According good clinical practice: (non-induced) sputum samples will be taken at admission and every following morning. If direct examination and PCR of the first three classic sputum samples are negative: patients will be randomised in two groups with a different diagnostic approach (induced sputum versus endoscopic approach) The aim of our study is to proof that a thoroughgoing endoscopic approach has a higher sensibility than an induced sputum in the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in patients with a high suspicion of active tuberculosis on the chest X-ray but with a negative direct examination and/or PCR on three consecutive normal sputum samples. The investigators will include 154 patients (based on a statistical analysis for a hypothesis that the endoscopic approach has a sensibility that's twice the sensibility of the induced sputum). - first arm: 2 consecutive induced sputum using an ultrasonic nebulizer. - second arm: CT thorax to evaluate the exact anatomic localisation of the disease followed by fluoroscopy-guided bronchoscopy for BAL (bronchoalveolar lavage) and transbronchial biopsies. A sputum sample immediately after the endoscopy will be collected if possible.

NCT ID: NCT01002170 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Pharmacokinetic Study of Patients Who Undergo Cycloserine, a 2nd-line Antituberculosis Medicament

CSPK
Start date: May 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

In all treatments of tuberculosis, the second-line drugs are usually less effective but have more drug toxicity than the first-line ones. For the multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) patients, who are resistant to the major first-line anti-tuberculosis drugs such as Rifampin and Isoniazid, the second-line agents, like Cycloserine in this research, are in frequent use. Taking patients' safety into consideration, therapeutic drug monitoring of Cycloserine has been listed as a routine examination during the tuberculosis treatment and established a suggested Cycloserine serum concentration of 20~35 mcg/mL. While this suggested drug concentration was set up, it isn't suitable to all races in the world. The investigators plan to develop the therapeutic drug monitoring protocols and a suggested treating concentration fitting for Asian (Taiwanese). In addition, through this research, the investigators can also realize that factors causing different pharmacokinetics and the clinical outcomes in different Cycloserine level.

NCT ID: NCT00948077 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Pharmacokinetic Study for Anti-tuberculosis Drugs

TBPK
Start date: July 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

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.

NCT ID: NCT00944021 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Evaluation of Early Bactericidal Activity in Pulmonary Tuberculosis (CL-010)

Start date: August 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

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.

NCT ID: NCT00926601 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Prevalence and Clinical Significance of Co-infection of Mycoplasma Pneumoniae in Patients With Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: June 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

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.

NCT ID: NCT00864383 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Controlled Comparison of Two Moxifloxacin Containing Treatment Shortening Regimens in Pulmonary Tuberculosis

REMoxTB
Start date: January 2008
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

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.

NCT ID: NCT00834353 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Prospective Study of N-acetyltransferase2 (NAT2) and Cytochrome P4502E1 (CYP2E1) Gene as Susceptible Risk Factors for Antituberculosis (ATT) Induced Hepatitis

Start date: September 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

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.