View clinical trials related to Tuberculosis.
Filter by:A total of 60 TB patients aged 65 years and below who are randomly assigned to the experimental group and the control group. The experimental group is injected with BCG-PPD test drug once, and the control group is injected with BCG-PPD control drug once.Subjects undergoing physical examination, vital signs, blood routine, urine routine, blood biochemistry, electrocardiogram, chest X-ray, tuberculosis culture, tuberculosis smear, HIV antibody test and blood pregnancy(only women of childbearing age) during the screening period.Vital signs were checked before skin test, the injection site is photographed at 0min after skin test, and vital signs are checked at 30min after skin test.Vital signs examination, injection site photography and reaction measurement are performed 48h and 72h after skin test.Physical examination, vital signs, routine blood test, routine urine test, biochemical test, electrocardiogram and blood pregnancy test are performed again 7 days after skin test to evaluate the safety of BCG-PPD.
The investigators hypothesise that high dose RIF (RIF35) will increase pericardial fluid RIF exposure and so enhance mycobacterial clearance, compared to standard of care dosing (RIF10). This Phase 2b randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded trial will evaluate the efficacy and safety of RIF 35mg/kg compared 10mg/kg, added to standard first-line ATT, for the treatment of PCTB.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the pharmacokinetic (PK) properties of antiretroviral (ARV) and anti-tuberculosis (TB) drugs administered during pregnancy and postpartum.
This study evaluates the effectiveness of locally implantation of mesenchymal stem cell on vertebral bone defects due to infection of mycobacterium tuberculosis. there are controlled participants who receives placebo and patients who receives implantation of MSc
This is a first time in human (FTIH) study to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics (PK) of single and repeat ascending doses of GSK2556286 in healthy adult participants. Food effect (FE) cohorts will investigate the influence of food on the PK of GSK2556286. The study will be conducted in two parts. Part A will be a single ascending dose (SAD) including up to 11 cohorts (Cohort 1A to cohort 11A) and Part B will be a multiple ascending dose (MAD), including up to 4 cohorts (Cohort 1B to cohort 4B).
The purpose of this research is to find out if a single dose of pre-travel vaccination with BCG can lessen tuberculosis (TB) infection by producing an immune response when given to adults traveling to countries with a high burden of TB. BCG will be compared with a placebo (an inactive vaccine). BCG (Japan) is used globally but is not approved for use in the United States, therefore it is considered experimental. Participants choosing to take part in this research study, will be randomly assigned (this is like a coin flip) to BCG or placebo. 2000 eligible volunteers will be enrolled.
The COVID-19 pandemic might be an opportunity to review and refine our practices in anti TB treatment. For the follow-up of selected patients, telephone consultations may be efficient and cost-effective. The aim of the study is to assess the efficiency and the satisfaction with telephone consultation for the pharmacist and the TB patient. The study was conducted in tertiary care hospital TB control centres patients.
Two diagnostic tools for TB screening in high risk groups need additional assessment: the AeoNose™, an 'electronic nose device' for breath sampling, and digital chest X-ray (CXR) with computer aided detection with CAD4TB® software. This study will systematically screen prisoners and its' employees for TB, test the diagnostic performance of AeoNose™ and CAD4TB (both individually and together) as a TB screening tool and and establish Mycobacterium tuberculosis epidemiology in Paraguayan prisons.
In the context of the emergence of cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) it is crucial to improve patient's management. Therefore, assessing the place of innovative strategies enabling the diagnosis of those cases (e.g. WGS and Deeplex-MycTB) in the personalized care of patients with MDR-TB and the rationalization of medical biology procedures is a major issue. This project participates to these goals since the investigators will : (i) assess the diagnostic qualities and the performance of the different innovatives strategies enabling detection of resistance to anti-tuberculosis drugs, (ii) assess the impact of these strategies in the implementation of personalized treatments for MDR-TB patients, and (iii) assess the overall costs of these strategies.
TB Aftermath will compare effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and feasibility of two ACF strategies for detecting recurrent TB and provide evidence needed to implement and scale the preferred ACF strategy. The specific aims are: Primary Aim 1: To conduct a non-inferiority randomized trial to measure the comparative effectiveness of two potentially implementable ACF strategies within India's National TB Elimination Program (NTEP), conducted by existing NTEP healthcare workers (HCWs): (i) home-based ACF (HACF) and (ii) telephonic ACF (TACF). Primary Aim 2: To characterize implementation processes of the ACF strategies using the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework to inform future scale-up and sustainability. Primary Aim 3: To model the impact and cost effectiveness of the ACF strategies evaluated in the trial, and of potential alternative strategies for the targeting and timing of those strategies. Secondary Aim: To measure the association of the severity, chronicity and progression of post-TB lung impairment with recurrent TB disease.