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Tuberculosis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01040611 Active, not recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of Music Therapy

TMT
Start date: October 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Tuberculosis belongs to chronic diseases as a result of the treatment of disease over a long period, admission to negative pressure isolation wards, and restrictions on visitors. During the in-patient admission, patients are vulnerable to social isolation and separation anxiety. If anxiety sustained, patients' quality of life would be affected. Thus, it is important to improve patients' experience of anxiety. Music has the effectiveness of relaxation, and is helpful to patients' anxious status and physiological responses. This study examined the effectiveness of music therapy on anxiety, depression and physiological responses for patients with tuberculosis.

NCT ID: NCT01038830 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

QuantiFERON Change During Anti-tuberculosis Medication

Start date: May 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The aim of this study is to evaluate the change of QuantiFERON-TB gold in tube assay (QFT) during the treatment of active tuberculosis.

NCT ID: NCT01033929 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

A Safety and Dose Finding Trial of C-Tb, When Given to Adult Patients Recently Diagnosed With Active Tuberculosis

TESEC-02
Start date: January 2010
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective is to assess the safety of two doses of C-Tb (0.01 and 0.1 µg/0.1 mL) when administered intradermally by the Mantoux technique to patients in the acute phase of treatment against active TB. The secondary objectives are to assess the immune response of two doses (0.01 and 0.1 µg/0.1 mL) of C-Tb from the size of induration and to assess the safety of unpreserved C-Tb and C-Tb preserved with 0.5% phenol (local reactions).

NCT ID: NCT01021124 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Latent Tuberculosis Infection in Bone Marrow Transplant Recipients

Start date: January 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The aim of this study is to estimate the usefulness of a T cell-based assay (i.e. Quantiferon-Gold In-Tube assay) for diagnosis of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) in bone marrow transplant recipients. For this purpose, the investigators enrolled bone marrow transplant recipients and observed the developement of tuberculosis after the transplantation.

NCT ID: NCT01017536 Completed - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Safety and Immunogenicity of AERAS-402 in HIV-infected, Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG)-Vaccinated Adults

Start date: December 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This was a Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 1 site in South Africa. A total of 26 subjects were randomized 1:1 to receive 2 doses of either AERAS-402 at 3 x 10^10 vp (N=13) or placebo (N=13) on Study Days 0 and 28. Dose-escalation to a second group of 40 subjects was planned, but although no safety concerns were identified, the sponsor decided not to continue the study.

NCT ID: NCT01014481 Terminated - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Appropriate Timing of HAART in Co-infected HIV/TB Patients

TIME
Start date: October 2009
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

To study the optimal timing to initiate antiretroviral therapy in HIV-infected patients who are receiving tuberculosis treatment between at 4 weeks and at 12 weeks after tuberculosis treatment by comparing the composite end point of death rate, hospitalization rate and adverse drug reactions at week 48, 96 and 144.

NCT ID: NCT01011543 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Induced Sputum Versus Bronchoscopy in Smear Negative Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: August 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomised study that compares different diagnostic approaches for diagnosing pulmonary tuberculosis in patients suspected of pulmonary tuberculosis in whom the three classic (non-induced) sputum samples didn't show tuberculous bacillus on direct examination. The investigators compare the sensibility of induced sputum technique with an endoscopic approach (CT-scan followed by BAL and fluoroscopy-guided transbronchial biopsies and eventually sputum collection immediately after the bronchoscopy). People in high risk population for tuberculosis undergoing screening by chest X-ray or symptomatic patients will be admitted to the hospital if their chest X-ray shows a suspicion of active tuberculosis. According good clinical practice: (non-induced) sputum samples will be taken at admission and every following morning. If direct examination and PCR of the first three classic sputum samples are negative: patients will be randomised in two groups with a different diagnostic approach (induced sputum versus endoscopic approach) The aim of our study is to proof that a thoroughgoing endoscopic approach has a higher sensibility than an induced sputum in the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in patients with a high suspicion of active tuberculosis on the chest X-ray but with a negative direct examination and/or PCR on three consecutive normal sputum samples. The investigators will include 154 patients (based on a statistical analysis for a hypothesis that the endoscopic approach has a sensibility that's twice the sensibility of the induced sputum). - first arm: 2 consecutive induced sputum using an ultrasonic nebulizer. - second arm: CT thorax to evaluate the exact anatomic localisation of the disease followed by fluoroscopy-guided bronchoscopy for BAL (bronchoalveolar lavage) and transbronchial biopsies. A sputum sample immediately after the endoscopy will be collected if possible.

NCT ID: NCT01007396 Completed - Clinical trials for Latent Tuberculosis Infection

Diagnosis of Tuberculosis Infection in Health Care Workers Using Ex-vivo Interferon-gamma Assay

Start date: January 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The present study was to evaluate the usefulness of a whole-blood interferon-r release assays (IGRAs) as diagnostic tool of the latent tuberculosis infection for healthcare workers.

NCT ID: NCT01003093 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

A Safety and Immunogenicity Trial With an Adjuvanted Tuberculosis(TB) Subunit Vaccine

THYB-01
Start date: November 2005
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety profile of an adjuvanted TB subunit vaccine administered at 0 and 2 months in healthy BCG-unvaccinated volunteers with no prior history of TB disease or known prior exposure to TB

NCT ID: NCT01002170 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Pharmacokinetic Study of Patients Who Undergo Cycloserine, a 2nd-line Antituberculosis Medicament

CSPK
Start date: May 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

In all treatments of tuberculosis, the second-line drugs are usually less effective but have more drug toxicity than the first-line ones. For the multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) patients, who are resistant to the major first-line anti-tuberculosis drugs such as Rifampin and Isoniazid, the second-line agents, like Cycloserine in this research, are in frequent use. Taking patients' safety into consideration, therapeutic drug monitoring of Cycloserine has been listed as a routine examination during the tuberculosis treatment and established a suggested Cycloserine serum concentration of 20~35 mcg/mL. While this suggested drug concentration was set up, it isn't suitable to all races in the world. The investigators plan to develop the therapeutic drug monitoring protocols and a suggested treating concentration fitting for Asian (Taiwanese). In addition, through this research, the investigators can also realize that factors causing different pharmacokinetics and the clinical outcomes in different Cycloserine level.