Clinical Trials Logo

Tuberculosis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Tuberculosis.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT01829490 Active, not recruiting - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Safety Study of ChAdOx1 85A Vaccination With and Without MVA85A Boost in Healthy Adults

Start date: July 2013
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase I trial to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of a ChAdOx1 85A vaccination with and without MVA85A boost in healthy BCG vaccinated adults.

NCT ID: NCT01828827 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Food Effect Study on the Bioavailability and PK of PA-824 Tablets in Healthy Adult Subjects

CL-003
Start date: March 2007
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase 1, single-center, randomized, balanced, single-dose, two-treatment, two-period, two-sequence, crossover, open-label study to evaluate the effect of food on the pharmacokinetics of PA-824. This study was designed to understand the possible effects of a high-calorie, high-fat meal on PA-824 absorption and pharmacokinetics. The hypothesis to be tested in this study is that the rate and extent of absorption of PA-824, as measured by Tmax, Cmax, AUC(0-t), and AUC(0 inf), are the same after a high-calorie, high-fat meal as compared with after a minimum 10-hour fast.

NCT ID: NCT01811823 Completed - HIV Clinical Trials

Effect of HIV and/or Active Tuberculosis on the Immune Responses to Trivalent Influenza Vaccine (TIV) in Adults

TIV_HIV_TB
Start date: March 31, 2014
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Prospective, open-labelled study which will enrol 360 participants in four groups of 80 participants including: HIV-uninfected adults without evidence of TB; HIV-infected adults without any evidence of TB; HIV-uninfected adults with concurrent microbiologic confirmed TB, HIV-infected adults with concurrent microbiologic confirmed TB. Participants will receive the recommended seasonal 2013 un-adjuvanted Trivalent Influenza Vaccine (TIV). At 3 visits, blood will be collected for determination of immune responses. Objective: • To determine the effect of HIV-infection, tuberculosis (TB) and HIV-TB co-infection on immune responses

NCT ID: NCT01802502 Completed - Clinical trials for Tuberculous Meningitis

Rifampicin Explorative PK Study for Tuberculous Meningitis Comparing Oral and Intravenous Preparation

REMOVER
Start date: June 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Tuberculous (TB) meningitis is the most severe manifestation of TB infection, leaving up to 50% of patients dead or neurologically disabled. Current treatment is similar to treatment of lung TB, although penetration of some antibiotics into the brain is poor and the immune-pathology of TB meningitis is very different from pulmonary TB. In a recent phase II clinical trial from the investigators group, the first of its kind globally, intensified antibiotic treatment, with moxifloxacin and high dose rifampicin, strongly reduced mortality of TB meningitis. The investigators aim to examine the effect of intensified antibiotic treatment on mortality and morbidity of TB meningitis in a phase 3 clinical trial, preceded with an explorative pharmacokinetic (PK) study to examine if higher oral doses rifampicin result in exposures similar to the i.v. dose used in our phase 2 trial, since oral rifampicin could be implemented much easier in low-resource settings.

NCT ID: NCT01800487 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

The Efficacy of Silymarin on the Prevention of Hepatotoxicity From Antituberculosis Drugs

Start date: January 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hepatitis is one of the most common adverse effect from anti-tuberculosis. Silymarin showed its efficacy to decreased serum alanine transaminase enzyme in animal models from recent study. No confirmed this efficacy was performed in human. A prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was carried out according to Good Clinical Practice Guideline. This study is to define the efficacy of silymarin to prevent hepatotoxicity from anti-tuberculosis drugs. Informed consent is obtained prior to the study. New patients diagnosed with tuberculosis are enrolled. Patients with liver diseases, current alcohol drinking more than 20 g/day, regular use of herbal or other potential hepatotoxic drugs are excluded. Patients are treated with a standard regimen of four anti-tuberculosis therapy. They will randomize to receive either placebo or silymarin (140 mg) thrice daily. Liver function test (LFT) and clinical changes are assessed at 2- and 4-week after initiation of the treatment. DILI from anti-tuberculosis drugs ('atb-DILI') is defined as: i) a rise of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) to 2 times above normal upper limit, or ii) an elevation of total bilirubin more than 2 mg/dl with or without ALT elevation. The study endpoints are the level of ALT by week 4 and the number of patients who developed atb-DILI. Statistical analysis is used to compare the differences in ALT and number of atb-DILI

NCT ID: NCT01798121 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis Identification.

Equivalence Study of Tuberculin Purified Protein Derivative in Comparison With a Reference Standard (PPD-S2)

02
Start date: February 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A study to determine bioequivalence of PPD material versus Reference Standard.

NCT ID: NCT01798095 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis Infection

Equivalence Study of Specificity of PPD

03
Start date: February 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Determine if investigational products and reference standard produce similar responses.

NCT ID: NCT01785186 Completed - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

Evaluation of SQ109, High-dose Rifampicin, and Moxifloxacin in Adults With Smear-positive Pulmonary TB in a MAMS Design

Start date: April 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is a multiple-arm, multiple-stage (MAMS), phase 2, open label, randomized, controlled clinical trial that will compare the efficacy and safety of four experimental four drug regimens with a standard control regimen in patients with smear positive, pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). Patients will be randomly allocated to the control or one of the four experimental regimens in the ratio 2:1:1:1:1. Experimental regimens will be given for 12 weeks. Thereafter, participants in the experimental arms will receive continuation phase treatment for 14 weeks containing standard-dose rifampicin and isoniazid. All participants will receive 25 mg of vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) with every dose of INH to prevent INH‐related neuropathy. Interim analyses will be conducted during the trial for efficacy, with the aim of identifying experimental arms that perform below a pre‐specified efficacy threshold; these arms will then be stopped from further recruitment. Following the first scheduled interim analysis on March 3rd, the Trial Steering Committee (TSC) followed a recommendation of the independent data monitoring committee (IDMC) and has stopped the enrolment into two of the arms in the MAMS-TB trial: HRZQ and HR20ZQ, based on these arms not meeting the pre-specified gain in efficacy over control. Importantly, there was no safety concern that prompted stopping recruitment to these arms. They recommended that recruitment to arm 2 (HRZQ) and 3 (HR20ZQ) be terminated as there was insufficient evidence that these regimens could shorten treatment. Importantly, there was no evidence that either arm was inferior to standard treatment (the control arm) with regards to efficacy. There was, however, sufficient evidence that the other intervention arms HR35ZE and HR20ZM could shorten treatment to continue enrolling patients.

NCT ID: NCT01782950 Recruiting - Clinical trials for AIDS With Tuberculosis

Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetics of Antituberculosis Drugs and Tuberculosis Treatment Outcomes

SOUTH
Start date: February 2013
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Tuberculosis (TB) is a leading cause of death in HIV-infected individuals. There are insufficient data correlating concentrations of anti-TB drugs with treatment response. We hypothesize that sub-therapeutic concentrations of anti-TB drugs are associated with inadequate TB treatment response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

NCT ID: NCT01779102 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Safety Study Investigating if Concomitant Injections of C-Tb and 2 T.U Tuberculin Affect Induration Responses

TESEC-07
Start date: October 2013
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

A new, more specific skin test to detect tuberculosis has been developed by Statens Serum Institut in Denmark. The new skin test is named C-Tb and like the current Tuberculin a positive test result will show as redness and/or induration at the injection site, while a negative test will leave no reactions. The aim of this study is to address if the size of induration and the sensitivity of C-Tb is influenced by concomitant injections of C-Tb and Tuberculin. Furthermore, the intention is to evaluate the safety of C-Tb when injected alone or concomitantly with Tuberculin.