View clinical trials related to TB - Tuberculosis.
Filter by:This randomized trial uses the evidence-based Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach (SAIA) adapted for tuberculosis (SAIA-TB) to assess the comprehensive tuberculosis (TB) care cascade across 16 clinics in rural Eastern Cape, South Africa to improve patient outcomes. The aims of this study are to: - Evaluate the effectiveness of SAIA-TB use in clinics on TB cascade outcomes for TB patients and with high-risk contacts - Determine the drivers of SAIA-TB implementation success or failure across clinics The investigators hypothesize that SAIA-TB implementation will lead to a 20% increase in each of: TB screening, TB preventive treatment initiation, and TB disease treatment initiation during the 18-month intervention period.
The diverse microbial communities in different parts of the human body (microbiome) are important for health but understudied in pulmonary tuberculosis (TB), which is the single biggest infectious cause of death in the world. The investigators will study the site-of-disease microbiome (in the lung bronchoalveolar space) in TB cases to investigate how, before TB treatment, metabolic compounds made by microbes affect host biomarkers important for TB control. The investigators will ask this question again at the end-of-treatment and one year later. Specifically, the investigators will sample the lung at the active TB hotspot identified by imaging and compare this to a non-involved lung segment usually in the opposite lung. The investigators will compare the lung microbiome to other sites in the body (i.e. oral cavity, nasopharynx, supraglottis, and gut). A small amount of blood (~15 ml) will be collected to assess peripheral immunological correlates of the host microbiome. Protected specimen brushings of the lung will be used to explore transcriptomic signatures and how these relate to the lung microbiome. The investigators will also apply these questions to the same number of controls (healthy patients and patients with an alternative diagnoses). This will lay the foundation for clinical trials to evaluate if specific bacteria have diagnostic (e.g., PCR) or therapeutic potential (e.g., antibiotics, prebiotics, probiotics, vaccines) where targeting the microbiome could improve clinical outcomes.
The COVID-19 pandemic might be an opportunity to review and refine our practices in anti TB treatment. For the follow-up of selected patients, telephone consultations may be efficient and cost-effective. The aim of the study is to assess the efficiency and the satisfaction with telephone consultation for the pharmacist and the TB patient. The study was conducted in tertiary care hospital TB control centres patients.
TB is increasingly diagnosed using the GeneXpert platform, which can be used for a variety of tests (not just TB). HIV viral load monitoring is required at least annually in patients on ART to detect failure of virologic suppression, however, most HIV VL testing is done centrally. A patient with virologic failure is more likely to get TB. The investigators wish to see if Xpert done at the clinic results in faster patient TB diagnosis and treatment initiation compared to sending specimens away for central testing. In a different patient group (PLHIV returning for HIV treatment monitoring), the investigators wish to see if POC Xpert HIV-1 viral load (Xpert VL) testing results in faster patient viral load quantification compared to centralised testing. Both POC tests will use the same testing hardware. This polyvalent utility of the GeneXpert system is hitherto uninvestigated in this local setting. Newly diagnosed pre-ART HIV positive patients will be approached and asked to be a part of this study. Patients will be randomly assigned to Ultra done at the clinic or the normal off-site laboratory TB testing. The time taken for patients to get diagnosed and time-to-treatment will be recorded. We will also do exploratory diagnostic accuracy evaluations including but not limited to, Ultra when done on mouth samples, the new SILVAMP FujiLAM on urine, and host RNA blood signatures for active TB. Additionally, a different group of HIV positive patients (on ART) returning to the clinic for annual follow-up visits will also be asked to join the study. These patients will be randomly selected for either Xpert VL testing done at the clinic or the normal off-site testing. The time taken for patients to receive viral load results will be recorded. Should the patient's viral loads be found to be higher than anticipated and considered by the clinical to indicate a lack of viral suppression, the time taken for patients to have ART regimen adjusted, receive adherence counselling or received HIV drug susceptibility testing will be recorded. This project will confirm if Ultra TB testing performs well in PLHIV irrespective of symptoms and may produce evidence that supports universal TB testing in this important and vulnerable patient group, including using novel diagnostics on non-traditional specimen types. The investigators will also assess whether POC placement of Ultra and Xpert VL has benefits (e.g., more patients diagnosed for TB or VL monitored during the same day visit).