Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05122624 |
Other study ID # |
R21AI161301 |
Secondary ID |
R21AI161301IRB00 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
November 10, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
February 29, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
April 2024 |
Source |
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Although curative treatment exists, tuberculosis (TB) remains the leading cause of infectious
mortality worldwide - often because people seek care for TB symptoms in highly
resource-constrained clinics that cannot provide same-day diagnostic testing. The research
team has developed an easy-to-use clinical risk score that, if implemented in these settings,
might help clinicians identify patients at high risk for TB and thereby start treatment for
those patients on the same day. This study will investigate the effectiveness and
implementation of this score in four peri-urban clinics in Uganda, providing critical
pragmatic data to inform (or halt) the design of a definitive large-scale cluster randomized
trial.
Description:
An estimated 1.5 million people die of tuberculosis (TB) every year. Many of these are people
who seek care in under-resourced clinics (for example, in rural areas or informal
settlements) where same-day TB diagnosis is not available. These patients are often unable to
return promptly to receive their results and start treatment, resulting in ongoing disease
transmission and often death. If TB treatment could be started on the same day as these
patients initially seek care, substantial mortality and transmission could be averted. The
research team has developed and validated a clinical risk score ("PredicTB") for adult
pulmonary TB that could aid in clinical decision-making. This risk score ranges from 1-10,
can be calculated by hand in under a minute using readily available clinical data (e.g., age,
sex, self-reported HIV status), and has sufficiently high accuracy to inform decisions about
same-day empiric treatment initiation while confirmatory test results are pending. Same-day
treatment initiation improves patient outcomes for other infectious diseases (for example,
sexually transmitted diseases including HIV), and this novel clinical risk score holds
similar promise for TB, the leading cause of infectious mortality worldwide. However, before
conducting a large-scale cluster randomized trial to evaluate whether this score could
improve patient-important outcomes, it is critical to first generate evidence that this score
could be effective and be implemented in the most-resource-limited settings for which it is
intended.
The research team proposes a type 2 hybrid effectiveness-implementation evaluation of the
PredicTB clinical risk score in four peri-urban clinics in Uganda, with an additional four
clinics serving as a comparison group. The Specific Aims are to evaluate the effectiveness of
PredicTB on clinical outcomes including rapid treatment initiation, TB mortality, and loss to
care (Aim 1); to evaluate the implementation of PredicTB in terms of reach, adoption,
implementation, and maintenance (Aim 2); and the project the long-term impact and
cost-effectiveness of PredicTB implementation (Aim 3). The primary outcome is the increase in
the proportion of patients with microbiologically confirmed TB who start treatment within
seven days of initial presentation. To accomplish these aims, the research team will adopt a
highly pragmatic study design in which the research team train clinicians in the use of the
PredicTB score and perform quarterly site visits but otherwise minimize contact between study
staff and treating clinicians. This will enable the research team to evaluate whether
implementation of PredicTB is likely to impact clinical decision-making and patient outcomes
under actual field settings. If successful, this evaluation will provide critical data to
justify (or halt) the conduct of a large-scale pragmatic clinical trial - not only will it
generate preliminary evidence of effectiveness, but it will also inform appropriate
implementation. Patients in highly resource-constrained settings are at the greatest risk of
suffering the ill effects of TB disease, including long-term morbidity and death. This study
represents an important first step toward improving clinical management for these
marginalized patients and thus toward reaching global targets for ending the TB epidemic.