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Tuberculosis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05861440 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Tuberculous Lymphadenitis

Applying Shear Wave Elastography for Adjunct Steroid on Tuberculous Lymphadenitis

Start date: May 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

1. To prospectively collect the radiologic data from the initial phase till the post-treatment phase of tuberculous lymphadenitis. 2. To prospectively investigate the benefits of corticosteroid on reduction of paradoxical upgrading reaction in patients with tuberculous lymphadenitis based on the results of shear wave elastography. 3. To investigate the potential biomarker of host immunity in response to tuberculosis and predict the development of paradoxical upgrading reaction.

NCT ID: NCT05847491 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Latent Tuberculosis in Healthcare Workers - the Reality of a Portuguese Tertiary Hospital

Start date: September 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Prospective, descriptive study to assess latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) among healthcare worker (HCW) in a tertiary hospital in a low-risk area.

NCT ID: NCT05845112 Not yet recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Start Taking Action For TB Diagnosis

START4ALL
Start date: September 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Globally, tuberculosis (TB) is one of the main causes of death and the leading cause from a single infectious agent. In 2020, an estimated 9.9 million people developed TB and 1.5 million died. Millions of people remain undiagnosed with TB, hindering efforts to end TB. TB tests have inadequate accuracy or performance characteristics for implementation across all populations and settings. None of the tests meet the WHO-Target-Product Profile for TB screening and most need specialized laboratory staff and infrastructure, making them unsuitable for primary health care (PHC). The overall aims for this project are to: 1. Accelerate the introduction/adoption of TB diagnostic tools and test combinations at PHC, for the timely detection of TB and improved linkage to treatment 2. Develop conditions for sustainable and equitable access to TB diagnostics tools and test combinations within PHC, 3. Strengthen global alliances and national partnerships to enable scale-up. The study is split into two major Phases. This application is focused on Phase 1. Specific Phase 1 objectives are to: 4. Evaluate the performance of selected TB diagnostic tools, and 5. Identify TB test combinations that increase the proportion of people diagnosed with bacteriologically confirmed TB. Methods in Brief: Activities will be conducted in Bangladesh, Brazil, Kenya, Cameroon, Malawi, Nigeria, and Vietnam. Each country will study selected priority populations at risk of TB, including adults attending PHC centers and district hospitals; people living with HIV (PLHIV); marginalized populations (internally displaced, refugees and pastoralists), and children. Activities within countries will use standardized protocols for evaluating diagnostic tests and combinations.

NCT ID: NCT05842161 Recruiting - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

South Africa Smoking Cessation and Engagement in HIV/TB Care Care

Start date: March 12, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to integrate elements from existing interventions developed by our team into a single intervention (QUIT-AD), designed to improve smoking cessation and favorable HIV/TB treatment outcomes among individuals with HIV and/or TB in Cape Town, South Africa. If feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy are demonstrated, the intervention will be ready for large-scale effectiveness/implementation testing. This program will has the potential to dramatically improve public health by increasing the smoking quit rate and facilitating favorable HIV/TB treatment outcomes among patients with HIV and/or TB in resource limited South African settings.

NCT ID: NCT05840809 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Pharmacokinetics of Drugs Used to Treat Drug Sensitive Tuberculosis in Breastfeeding Mother-infant Pairs

MILK TB
Start date: January 20, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Pregnant or lactating women requiring treatment for drug sensitive-TB will be identified and invited for sampling. If they are pregnant when identified, they will be invited for sampling after delivery. Plasma and breastmilk samples will be obtained pre-dose and at 2, 4, 6, and 8 hours post-dose. If logistics permit (for example living close to the research unit), the participant will be invited for a further sample at 24 hours post-dose. A heelprick sample will also be obtained from their breastfed infants at maternal trough (prior to maternal dose) and at a random timepoint (once per infant) over the 8-hour pharmacokinetic sampling visit in order to characterize concentrations of these drugs over an 8-hour dosing interval. Total concentrations of plasma and breastmilk Isoniazid, Rifampicin, Pyrazinamide and Ethambutol will be determined. If a participant has her first pharmacokinetic profile in the intensive phase of TB treatment (whilst on all four of isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide and ethambutol), she will be invited for a subsequent sampling day with the same time points when she is on the continuation phase of therapy (rifampicin and isoniazid).

NCT ID: NCT05824871 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Rifampicin-resistant Tuberculosis

Sudapyridine (WX-081) in RR/MDR/XDR-tuberculosis Patients

WISH
Start date: September 2, 2022
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this study is to demonstrate that the antibacterial activity of Sudapyridine (WX-081) is not inferior to Bedaquiline when added to a Background Regimen (BR) for treatment of rifampicin- resistant TB. Also, safety and clinical outcome will be evaluated.

NCT ID: NCT05824091 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics (PK), and Food Effect of MK-7762 in Healthy Adults

Start date: February 23, 2023
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of single and then multiple doses of MK-7762 (TBD09) in healthy volunteers in the context of a first-in-human study. The effect of food on the rate and extent of absorption of a single oral dose of MK-7762 (TBD09) will also be evaluated.

NCT ID: NCT05820594 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Using BCG Vaccine to Understand Tuberculosis Infection

Pilot BCG CHIM
Start date: June 30, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Tuberculosis (TB) is a disease that usually causes an infection in the lungs. The only vaccine to prevent TB is called BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin). BCG contains a live germ similar to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the germ that causes TB. BCG does not work very well, and TB remains the most common cause of death by infection worldwide. Human challenge models involve exposing healthy volunteers to an infectious disease in a safe and controlled way. This helps researchers understand more about an infectious disease and the body's response and can help develop new vaccines and treatments. The purpose of this study is to set up a human challenge model using BCG to understand how the body responds to this. If our human challenge model works well it may be used to help researchers develop new vaccines and tablets to treat TB in the future. This study will recruit healthy volunteers, of all genders, age 18-50 years. The first part of the study (phase A) will recruit 10 participants. Participants in phase A will receive intradermal injection with BCG into the upper arm at three times the usual dose. On day 14 after BCG the following skin samples will be taken from the BCG site with the use of local anaesthetic: skin swab, microbiopsy, skin scrape and punch biopsy. Participants in this phase of the study will also have blood tests to ensure they are safe to take part and to monitor the immune response to BCG. The overall aim of this part of the study will be to ensure BCG can be isolated (grown in culture and by molecular techniques) from participants' BCG site 14 days after the injection. The investigators aim to test whether BCG can be isolated by punch biopsy and minimally invasive techniques (microbiopsy, skin scrape and skin swab). If the investigators find that they can isolate BCG successfully using the minimally invasive methods of skin sampling and the participants have not experienced any serious adverse events, they can proceed to phase B of the study. In phase B 20 participants will be recruited. These participants will receive BCG as described for phase A. They will then have serial skin samples taken using either microbiopsy, skin scrape or skin swab on days 0, 2, 7, 14 and 28. The focus of this phase of the study is to assess immune responses to intradermal injection at the local (skin), systemic (blood) and respiratory mucosal (nose) compartments. This will involve longitudinal sampling from blood, nose and skin to measure BCG growth and the immune response over time.

NCT ID: NCT05818059 Not yet recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Active Close Contact Investigation of Tuberculosis Through Computer-aided Detection and Stool Xpert MTB/RIF Among People Living in Ethiopia

CADOOL
Start date: May 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Tuberculosis is the 13th cause of death from all causes, infecting roughly the 25% of the world population, and Ethiopia is listed among the 30 high-burden countries both for TB and for HIV/TB. In recent years, the immediate consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic was a large fall in the number of newly reported TB cases indicators that represent a relevant drawback in the pursue of the 2025 End TB Milestones. For active case investigation of TB close contacts, WHO recently recommended the use of Computer- aided detection (CAD), a technology that can help chest X-ray interpretation in situations of human resources constrains, and it may be cost-effective in low-resource settings. Also, for tuberculosis diagnosis, widely-available GeneXpert on stool samples showed high diagnostic performances in term of both sensitivity and specificity. It is important to assess alternative modalities that could improve diagnosis during TB contact investigation in Ethiopia and the other countries where TB represents a crucial burden.

NCT ID: NCT05807399 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

PanACEA - STEP2C -01

Start date: April 14, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a phase 2B/C, open label platform study that will compare the efficacy, safety of 3 experimental regimens with a standard control regimen in participants with newly diagnosed, drug sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis. In stage 1, participants will be randomly allocated to the control or one of the 2 rifampicin-containing experimental regimens in the ratio 1:1:1. In stage 2, the experimental arm 4 containing BTZ-043 will be added. The allocation ratio will be changed to co-enrol the remaining participants in arms 1- 3 simultaneously with arm 4. When arms 1-2 are fully enrolled and arm 4 is not, further participants will be randomized 1:1 to control and experimental arm 4. Not all countries will participate in stage 2.