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Tuberculosis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05382312 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Early Bactericidal Activity, Safety & Tolerability of Oral GSK3036656 in a Dual Combination With Novel and Established Antitubercular Agents, or Standard of Care in Adults With Rifampicin Susceptible Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: July 26, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to measure the early bactericidal activity (EBA), safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics with GSK3036656 in combination with either delamanid or bedaquiline or BTZ-043, delamanid in combination with bedaquiline or standard of care for 14 days in participants with newly diagnosed sputum smear positive drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis. Participants will revert to the standard treatment (RIFAFOUR® e-275) once the study treatment (Day 1 to Day 14) has been completed.

NCT ID: NCT05381194 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Multidrug- and Rifampicin-resistant Tuberculosis

BPaL(M) Regimen for the Treatment of MDR/RR-TB

Start date: December 13, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this study is to analyze the efficacy of a new regimen using Bedaquiline, Pretomanid, Linezolid, and Moxifloxacin for 24 weeks or Bedaquiline, Pretomanid, Linezolid for 26 weeks for the treatment of MDR/RR-TB through the clinical trial.

NCT ID: NCT05359315 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Study on the Use of Interferon Gamma (Ingaron) Injections in Patients With Drug-resistant Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: April 15, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of the complex therapy of drug-resistant respiratory tuberculosis using the drug Ingaron, a lyophilisate for the preparation of a solution for injection for intramuscular or subcutaneous administration of 500,000 IU.

NCT ID: NCT05342064 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Closing -TB GAPs - for People Living With HIV: TB Guidance for Adaptable Patient-Centered Service

TB_GAPS
Start date: July 11, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Tuberculosis (TB) is the world's leading infectious cause of mortality and responsible for 1/3 of deaths in people living with human immunodeficiency virus (PLHIV). Children and adolescents living with HIV (CALHIV) are disproportionately affected due to inadequate preventive services, large case detection gaps, treatment and adherence challenges, and knowledge gaps. This project will generate evidence to inform interventions targeting several of these weaknesses in the TB/HIV cascade of care. Early detection and treatment of TB improve outcomes in people living with HIV (PLHIV). A key challenge in the detection of HIV-associated TB has been the implementation of screening that identifies the correct population for diagnostic testing. Increasing evidence demonstrates the poor performance of recommended symptom screens and diagnostic approaches. Hence, the investigators aim to define a more accurate TB screening and testing strategy among PLHIV (Objective 1 and Objective 2). TB preventive treatment (TPT) averts HIV-associated TB. Nevertheless, among PLHIV, TPT initiation and completion rates are sub-optimal and effective delivery strategies are not defined. As such, the investigators aim to identify the most effective TPT delivery strategy through shared decision making and by integrating approaches proven to be effective at improving HIV treatment adherence (Objective 3). Although evidence demonstrates that isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT) is cost-effective in young children living in TB/HIV high burden settings, the cost-effectiveness of newer short-course TPT has primarily been studied in the context of a TB low-burden, high-income setting. The investigators aim to generate evidence to fill this knowledge gap and inform policy for PLHIV living in TB/HIV high burden settings (Objective 4). This study is supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial assistance award totaling an anticipated $5,000,000 over five years with 100 percent funded by CDC/HHS.

NCT ID: NCT05325125 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

Childhood TB Sequel

Start date: March 29, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to describe the long-term adverse outcomes associated with PTB in children, to describe the evolution of these sequelae, and to determine the epidemiological risk factors associated with these sequelae. The investigators will conduct a prospective cohort study. Children who have completed treatment for PTB will be enrolled. The study visit will be performed in the study clinic, where clinical assessment, spirometry and radiography will be performed. The planned duration of the study is 36 months. Participant enrolment is estimated to begin in March 2022. The estimated date of the last participant enrolled is December 2022.

NCT ID: NCT05317247 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Cough Audio Classification as a TB Triage Test

CAGE-TB
Start date: April 19, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

TB is the single biggest infectious cause of death (1.5 million died in 2018), killing more HIV-positive people than any other disease, and is arguably the most important poverty-related disease in the world. TB's estimated incidence in Africa has been declining over recent years but progress is slow and plateauing. To avert stagnation, truly innovative and ambitious technologies are needed, especially those that improve case finding and time-to-diagnosis as, in mathematical models based on the TB care cascade framework, interventions that accomplish this will have the most impact on disrupting population-level transmission, including when deployed at facilities where patients are readily accessible. Critically, these interventions (triage tests) must promote access to confirmatory testing (e.g., Xpert MTB/RIF Ultra) by enabling patients to be referred rapidly and efficiently during the same visit. The investigators will optimise and evaluate a technology that, aside from the investigators early case-controlled study to show feasibility, is hitherto not meaningfully investigated for TB. This gap is alarming given, on one hand, the enormity of the TB epidemic and the need for a triage test and, on the other hand, promising proofs-of-concept that demonstrate high diagnostic accuracy of cough audio classifier for respiratory diseases such as pneumonia, asthma. pertussis, croup, and COPD. In some cases, these classification systems are CE-marked, awaiting FDA-approval, and subject to late-stage clinical trials. This demonstrates the promise of the underlying technological principle. CAGE-TB's innovation is further enhanced by: applying advanced machine learning methods that the team have specifically developed for TB patient cough audio analysis, use of mixed methods research - drawing from health economics, implementation science, and medical anthropology - to inform product design and assess barriers and facilitators to implementation, and uniquely for a TB diagnostic test, its potential deployment as a pure mHealth (smartphone-based) innovation that mitigates many barriers that typically jeopardise TPP criteria fulfilment.

NCT ID: NCT05311423 Recruiting - Infertility, Female Clinical Trials

The Prevalence and Reproductive Outcome of Infertile Women With Genital Tuberculosis

TB-PRIME
Start date: December 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Female genital tuberculosis infection (FGTB) is an important cause of female infertility in TB-endemic areas. The pregnancy rate of assisted reproductive treatment (ART) in the infertile women with FGTB is still unsatisfied even after receiving standard anti-tuberculosis treatment. Moreover, recent years have witnessed an alarming increase in reports of FGTB-related maternal and neonatal complications after fertility treatments. These underscore that timely detection and treatment of FGTB before ART hold benefit for the mother and child.

NCT ID: NCT05306223 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

A Study of an Oral Short-course Regimen Including Bedaquiline for the Treatment of Participants With Multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis in China

PROSPECT
Start date: May 10, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate efficacy and safety of an oral bedaquiline-containing multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) short-course regimen (SCR) compared to an oral SCR not including bedaquiline at the end of treatment in participants with pulmonary MDR-TB in China.

NCT ID: NCT05285202 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

Clinic-based Versus Hotspot-focused Active TB Case Finding

CHASE-TB
Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This five-year study will evaluate two strategies for conducting tuberculosis (TB) active case finding (ACF) and linkage to TB treatment or TB preventive therapy (TPT) in peri-urban Uganda. The two strategies differ in the location where ACF activities are performed: A "facility-based" ACF/TPT strategy will perform ACF, plus linkage to TPT, in the immediate vicinity of a large public health facility and will primarily recruit individuals who are attending the health facility, irrespective of TB suspicion or symptoms. Alternatively, a "hotspot-based" strategy will use routine notification data and local expertise to identify local TB hotspots - defined as the geographic areas though to have the highest burden of undiagnosed TB per estimated population. The same infrastructure (personnel, equipment, supplies, etc.) for ACF/TPT will then be placed in those zones for a period of four months at a time, and the general population will be recruited for screening and linkage to TPT. The two interventions will be compared in a Type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial with a cluster-randomized, multiple-period crossover design. The study will evaluate whether hotspot-focused ACF/TPT results in a greater number of TB patients diagnosed and linked to care, and a greater number of individuals started on preventive therapy, than facility-based ACF/TPT. Secondarily, it will also compare the two interventions in terms of number of people initiated on TPT, and it will compare TB cases detected in regions performing ACF/TPT (either approach) against cases detected in regions that continue to perform the standard of care.

NCT ID: NCT05280886 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Multi-site Cohort Study for the Development of Personalized Pharmacotherapy in Patients With Tuberculosis (TB)

Start date: July 24, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Based on the collected antibiotic concentration data and individual patient's clinical information, a pharmacokinetic analysis report that can be applied for dose adjustment of the individual patient is provided. The pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic index using the minimum inhibition concentration (MIC) of the antibiotic obtained from the patient's clinical isolate is also explored. Utilizing these, we intend to establish a population pharmacokinetic model of antibiotics prescribed in treating Tuberculosis and Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM). The developed population pharmacokinetic model can be applied for therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) based on dose adjustment through the obtained pharmacokinetic parameters.