View clinical trials related to Tuberculosis, Pulmonary.
Filter by:India has the highest incidence of and mortality from multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) globally. Vitamin D status may be an important determinant of MDR-TB infection and treatment outcomes; however, observational evidence is insufficient to support its use as an adjunct therapy or prophylaxis. Using a case-control design, this study will evaluate the relationship between vitamin D status and active MDR-TB disease among adult outpatient pulmonary MDR-TB cases, household contact controls, and matched controls from the general population (non-household controls) in Mumbai, India. This study will also evaluate the cross-sectional association between vitamin D status and TB infection among household contact controls and non-household controls, and collect formative data in preparation for future randomized controlled trials of vitamin D in MDR-TB prevention and treatment in India.
Tuberculosis (TB) is transmitted in bioaerosols containing Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). Mtb-containing bioaerosols are likely related to host infectiousness and central to ongoing TB transmission. No routine diagnostic assay exists to measure Mtb in bioaerosols. Furthermore, published studies of Mtb in bioaerosol samples, have been limited to individuals with sputum-positive pulmonary TB. Currently TB diagnosis is based on clinical symptoms and sputum laboratory findings. However, approximately half of all patients commencing TB treatment are sputum negative resulting in a high proportion of presumptive treatments. We therefore propose to use a sensitive sampling protocol to investigate the prevalence of Mtb-containing bioaerosols in both sputum-positive and sputum-negative TB suspects.
The current treatment regimen for MDR-TB has poor outcomes and costs of treating MDR-TB are greater than treating drug susceptible TB, both in terms of health service and patient-incurred costs. Urgent action is needed to Identify short, effective and tolerable treatments for people with MDR-TB. The PRACTECAL economic evaluation sub-study (PRACTECAL-EE) will take place alongside the TB PRACTECAL trial, aiming to assess the costs to patients and providers of such regimens and to estimate the cost-effectiveness and poverty impact of an introduction of new MDR-TB regimens in the three countries participating in the main study.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety, early bactericidal activity (EBA) and pharmacokinetics of TBA-7371 in adult participants with rifampicin-sensitive tuberculosis and select dose regimen(s) for future studies.
Tuberculosis (TB) remains the major cause of morbidity and mortality among patients with HIV. Sub-optimal diagnostics contributes towards poor patient outcome and there is an urgent need to identify non-sputum-based point-of-care diagnostic tests. The urine based lateral flow lipoarabinomannan TB diagnostic test (LF-LAM) is a simple, inexpensive point-of-care test. In 2015, the World Health Organization endorsed LF-LAM for conditional use among patients with advanced HIV, but uptake of the test in clinical practices has been poor. The investigators aim to identify point-of-care (POC) strategies that can improve TB case detection and clinical outcomes among patients with advanced HIV. The project includes a main study and two sub-studies. The main study is a multicenter stepped wedge cluster-randomized controlled trial of LF-LAM implementation among patients with advanced HIV with 8-weeks follow-up. LF-LAM will be added to standard care and implemented stepwise at three hospitals in Ghana. Education in national TB treatment guidelines in collaboration with the Tuberculosis Control programme in Ghana, and Clinical audit of clinical staff with feedback, will be used to assess and strengthen LF-LAM implementation. The primary outcome time to TB treatment, for which a sample size of 690 participants will provide >90% power to detect a minimum of 7 days reduction. Secondary outcomes are: TB related morbidity, TB case detection, time to TB diagnosis and overall early mortality at 8 weeks. The HIV-associated TB epidemiology including genotypic analyses of M. tuberculosis isolates obtained through the main study will be described. In sub study A, focused ultrasound of lungs, heart and abdomen will be performed in a sub cohort of 100 participants. In sub study B, the investigators will establish a biobank and data warehouse for storage of blood, urine and sputum samples collected from participants that enter the study at Korle-Bu Teaching hospital. It is expected that LF-LAM will lead to earlier diagnosis and treatment of TB. Findings may further guide scaling-up of LF-LAM. The HIV-associated epidemic including genotypic properties and resistance properties which is important for improved management will be detailed. The investigators further expect to evaluate the potential of bedside ultrasound as a clinical tool in management of HIV/TB co-infected patients. The unique Ghanaian HIV-cohort and biobank may facilitate rapid evaluation of future prognostic biomarkers and new point-of-care TB diagnostic tests.
Bronchiectasis was described in the early 19th century by Laennec. Bronchiectasis is a chronic condition characterized by permanent and irreversible dilatation of the bronchial airways and impairment of mucociliary transport mechanism due to repeated infection and inflammation leading to colonization of organism and pooling of the mucus in the bronchial tree
Microbiome in lower respiratory diseases is not sufficiently known yet. The objective of this study is to investigate microbiome in patients who present with hemoptysis, and those with pulmonary tuberculosis, non-tuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease (NTM-PD), and lung cancer, analyzing respiratory specimen acquired by bronchoscopic approach.
This is a prospective, open label, two-centre, randomized, controlled, two-stage, phase Ib/IIa study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, PK, drug-drug interaction and bactericidal activity of BTZ-043 administered orally once daily over 14 days to participants with newly diagnosed, uncomplicated, smear-positive, drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis. The primary objective is to assess the safety and tolerability of BTZ-043 given over 14 days by evaluation of adverse events during treatment and follow-up period in patients with newly diagnosed, uncomplicated, smear-positive, drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis.
This study is an open-label, randomized, controlled, multi-center Phase IIB dose-finding trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and exposure-response-relationship of different doses of sutezolid (STZ) in combination with bedaquiline, delamanid and moxifloxacin in adults with newly diagnosed, uncomplicated, smear positive and drug sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis. Participants will be randomized to one of five arms containing bedaquiline, delamanid and moxifloxacin with different doses of STZ (0mg, 600mg once daily (OD), 1200mg OD, 600 mg twice daily (BD), 800 mg BD). Study treatment duration will be three months, followed by a follow-up period of 2 weeks. The primary objective is to identify the optimal dose of sutezolid to be used in subsequent studies that provides the best efficacy at acceptable safety of the drug by describing the safety, tolerability and exposure toxicity relationship of sutezolid (and its main metabolite) given over three months, in combination with standard-dose bedaquiline, delamanid and moxifloxacin, compared to standard-dose bedaquiline, delamanid and moxifloxacin alone.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of pravastatin adjunctive therapy when combined with the standard tuberculosis (TB) treatment regimen in adults with TB.