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Tuberculosis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03537170 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Dietary Assessment and Prevalence of Refeeding Syndrome in High-risk TB Patients in Chhattisgarh, India

Start date: November 23, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Severe tuberculosis (TB) leads to wasting and anorexia, increasing risk of the refeeding syndrome (RFS) as defined by current criteria. TB patients have high metabolic rates and require a high calorie diet, with nutritional supplementation programs improving outcomes. BMI inversely correlates with mortality in these patients. Risk of RFS, a life-threatening syndrome associated with initiation of feeding after a period of low intake, has not been studied in this population and it is not known whether severely malnourished TB patients benefit from lower caloric intake. This study aimed to examine the prevalence of RFS in TB inpatients in rural India and correlate this with baseline and inpatient caloric intake.

NCT ID: NCT03536117 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Dose-Defining Safety and Immunogenicity Study of MTBVAC in South African Neonates

MTBVAC-03
Start date: February 12, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A Phase 2a dose-defining study of MTBVAC to evaluate the safety, reactogenicity, immunogenicity, and potential for IGRA conversion and reversion, of MTBVAC in South African newborns. Ninety-nine HIV unexposed, BCG naïve newborns will be randomized to receive either BCG 2.5 x 105 CFU (n=24) or MTBVAC at one of three dose levels (n=75). Allocation will be double blind. Enrolment will be sequential into 3 cohorts of increasing MTBVAC dose (Cohort 1: n=25 MTBVAC 2.5 x 10E+04 and n=8 BCG; Cohort 2: n=25 MTBVAC 2.5 x 10E+05 and n=8 BCG; Cohort 3: n=25 MTBVAC 2.5 x 10E+06 and n=8 BCG). Dose escalation will be staggered to allow gradual evaluation of safety; final selection of the dose for Cohort 3 will be based on all available safety and immunogenicity data.

NCT ID: NCT03519425 Active, not recruiting - Hiv Clinical Trials

A Pragmatic Randomised Study to Optimise Screening, Prevention and Care for Tuberculosis in Malawi

PROSPECT
Start date: November 15, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A pragmatic open, three-arm individually-randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation will be conducted in one primary health care centre in Blantyre, Malawi, where HIV and TB are major contributors to early mortality. Participants will be adults with symptoms of tuberculosis (cough of any duration) attending the primary clinic with an acute care episode. We will exclude adults who have taken treatment for TB within the previous 6-months, who are taking isoniazid preventive therapy, who are not resident of Blantyre, or who plan to move out of Blantyre in the following 6-months. Participants will be randomly allocated into one of three groups: Group 1: Standard of care: Participants will be seen by facility health workers and receive clinician-directed screening for HIV and TB according to Malawi national guidelines. Group 2: Optimised HIV testing and treatment linkage: Participants will be offered testing for HIV using rapid oral fluid kits by research assistants. Those with confirmed HIV infection will be linked to the HIV care clinic where facility healthworkers will screen for TB using standard sputum-based diagnostics. Group 3: Optimised TB diagnosis, HIV screening and treatment linkage: Participants will receive a high-throughput and high-sensitivity TB screening intervention, in addition to the HIV testing intervention. This will comprise of an initial digital chest x-ray classified by the CAD4TB image-recognition software as either "high probability of TB", or "low probability of TB". Participants whose x-rays are suggestive of TB will receive confirmatory sputum testing with Xpert MTB/Rif Ultra cartridges, whilst participants whose x-rays have a low probability of TB will be referred to facility healthworkers for routine care. All participants will be seen at the health facility at day 56, where they will be tested for HIV (if not on ART) and screened for TB. The Primary Trial Outcome will compare between groups the time to tuberculosis treatment initiation by day 56. The trial is sufficiently powered to permit 3 pairwise comparisons between groups (i.e. Group 1 vs. 2; Group 2 vs. 3; and Group 1 vs. 3). This three-arm pragmatic trial design allows us to efficiently answer two separate, important public health questions: firstly, by comparing Group 2 to Group 1, we should be able to determine whether HIV care should be prioritised for adults with TB symptoms. Additionally, by comparing Group 3 to Group 2, we will provide strong evidence for the effectiveness of an optimised and integrated HIV and TB diagnostic and treatment linkage approach.

NCT ID: NCT03512249 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

Study to Evaluate H56:IC31 in Preventing Rate of TB Recurrence

Start date: January 31, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a phase 2, double-blind, randomized (1:1), placebo-controlled trial with two parallel groups. - H56:IC31 (investigational vaccine) - Placebo 900 HIV-negative adults with a diagnosis of drug susceptible pulmonary TB are planned to be included, recruited from TB clinics with established relationships to the trial sites at the start of their TB treatment. 5 study sites in South Africa: 2 sites from the AURUM institute (Klerksdorp and Tembisa) and 3 in Cape Town at TASK Applied Science (TASK), the University of Cape Town Lung Institute (UCTLI) and South African Tuberculosis Vaccine Initiative (SATVI) under UCT, respectively. 1 study site in Tanzania (TZ): 1 site at Mbeya Medical Research Centre (MMRC) under the National Institute for Medical Research (NIMR).

NCT ID: NCT03507816 Recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

A Multidrug-resistant (MDR) and Extensively Drug- Resistant (XDR) Tuberculosis Study in Alsace

Start date: February 23, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to examine the epidemiology of TB MR in Strasbourg and evaluate the second-line anti-tuberculosis treatments effectiveness, and the relevance and adequacy of the treatments with WHO recommendations. During years 2006-2016, all new cases of MDR TB or XDR TB diagnosed Strasbourg University Hospital will be included in the study (22 cases). Data were collected from the Center for Tuberculosis Control (CLAT) records, the patient's medical records.

NCT ID: NCT03498534 Withdrawn - Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Diabetes Control and Effect on Transmission and Development of Tuberculosis

Start date: September 2012
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Clinical test (essay) randomized to evaluate the toxicity adherence and efficiency of the chemoprophylaxis of tuberculosis (TB) in subjects with Diabetes Mellitus (DM) and latent TB. (600 subjects followed(continued) by 15 months). 3rd stage. Patients with DM and TB will be included to determine if the strict control of the dm achieved in clinics of the first level of attention improves clinical manifestations of tb, the result of treatment, the frequency of relapses, the mortality and the transmission to contacts. Elispot will be used to measure TB development and the time for the bacteriological negativization and biochemical parameters as well as tuberculin skin test (TST), quantiferon, in contacts. (160 patients 600 contacts followed(continued) for 12 months). additional there will be evaluated the socioeconomic impact of both diseases and his(her) control. 1er year: transverse study and recruitment years 2 and 3 participants' follow-ups in clinical tests(essays).

NCT ID: NCT03497195 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Achieving Tuberculosis (TB) Control In Zambia

TB
Start date: July 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To achieve TB control, innovative case finding interventions are needed that will reach the broader affected population including those that do not access the health facilities. Systematic community case finding with highly sensitive screening and diagnostic tools are needed. At the facility level, the index of suspicion for TB by health care workers needs to be raised to ensure that all those that need TB screening are appropriately screened.

NCT ID: NCT03492216 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Drinkers' Intervention to Prevent Tuberculosis (DIPT Study)

DIPT
Start date: April 16, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

There is an urgent global need to decrease the high mortality of tuberculosis (TB) in persons with HIV as TB is the leading cause of death among persons with HIV worldwide. The DIPT (Drinkers' Intervention to Prevent TB) study is a randomized, 2x2 factorial trial among HIV/TB co-infected adults in Uganda with heavy alcohol use (n=680 persons, 340 each U01). The goal of the study is to determine whether economic incentive interventions can promote both reduced alcohol use and isoniazid (INH) pill taking among HIV/TB co-infected adult heavy drinkers, during isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT: a six-month course of INH) at HIV clinics in southwestern Uganda. Participants will be randomized to one of four arms: Arm 1: no incentives (control); Arm 2: economic incentives for decreasing alcohol use only; Arm 3: economic incentives for IPT adherence only; Arm 4: economic incentives for decreasing alcohol use and for IPT adherence (rewarded independently).

NCT ID: NCT03478033 Recruiting - AIDS Clinical Trials

Rifampicin vs Rifabutin in HIV/AIDS Patients Combined With Tuberculosis

RRHT
Start date: April 15, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To compared the efficacy and safety of rifampicin and rifabutin which included in the standard treatment of anti-tuberculosis in HIV/AIDs patients combined with pulmonary tuberculosis, a multi-center, prospective cohort will be established. Antiviral efficacy and drug drug interaction will be investigated in order to provide optimized treatment for HIV/AIDs with tuberculosis.

NCT ID: NCT03474198 Completed - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

Two-month Regimens Using Novel Combinations to Augment Treatment Effectiveness for Drug-sensitive Tuberculosis

TRUNCATE-TB
Start date: March 21, 2018
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The current standard management strategy for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) is to treat with multiple drugs for 6 months, although patients often fail to adhere to the long treatment, leading to poor clinical outcomes including drug resistance, which is expensive and difficult to treat. The TRUNCATE-TB trial evaluates an alternative strategy (the TRUNCATE-TB Management Strategy) comprising treatment for 2 months (8 weeks, extended to 12 weeks if inadequate clinical response) with a regimen predicted to have enhanced sterilising activity ("boosted regimen") and monitoring closely after treatment cessation. Those who relapse (predicted to be always drug sensitive and likely to occur early) will be retreated with a standard 6 month regimen. The trial is a randomized, open-label, multi-arm, multi-stage (MAMS) trial to test the hypothesis that the TRUNCATE-TB Management Strategy is non-inferior to the standard management strategy in terms of longer-term outcomes (clinical status at 96 weeks). If non-inferiority is demonstrated then the advantages/disadvantages of implementing the strategy will be explored in secondary outcomes (from patient and programme perspective). The trial will evaluate the TRUNCATE-TB Management Strategy with 4 potential boosted regimens (180 per arm, total 900 with the standard TB management strategy arm). The boosted regimens include new drugs (licensed drugs, repurposed from other indications) and optimized doses of standard drugs, selected based on consideration of maximal sterilising effect, absence of drug-drug interactions, as well as safety and tolerability over a period of 2 months