Clinical Trials Logo

Tuberculosis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Tuberculosis.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT04369326 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Community Initiated Preventive Therapy for TB

CHIP-TB
Start date: September 7, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) currently recommends household contact investigation for new tuberculosis (TB) patients in low- and middle-income countries, with an emphasis on pediatric contacts. Although the aim of this policy is to find previously undetected TB patients and reduce transmission, such investigations represent a missed opportunity to start contacts without TB on preventive therapy (TPT). The WHO guidelines do not address the optimal implementation of contact investigation. The standard of care (SOC) in most settings, passive referral of pediatric contacts to the clinic by the index TB patient, has largely remained unsuccessful in practice. In 2017, the WHO estimated only 23% of eligible child contacts were started on TB preventive therapy. Household contact investigation has been shown to have a higher yield in active TB case finding, but is labor intensive, and may be challenging to implement in densely populated urban settings or informal settlements/slums. The WHO recently endorsed the use of a new TPT regimen (rifapentine and isoniazid weekly (3HP)) for both children and adults in high burden settings, and the programmatic roll out of this regimen offers the opportunity to simultaneously examine new strategies to improve the identification and treatment of pediatric TB household contacts. Objective: To compare the effectiveness of community-based versus facility-based child contact investigation and delivery of TB preventive care to inform the optimal implementation strategy for investigating pediatric household TB contacts. Study Design: Cluster-randomized trial in 32 clinics (16 clinics per arm) divided equally among South Africa and Ethiopia (8 clinics per arm per country). Methods: Newly diagnosed qualifying TB index patients (determined by South African or Ethiopian National TB guidelines) and participants' household child contacts will be recruited to participate. Local staff, including the relevant nurses and community health workers in the intervention and control clinics, will be trained to conduct contact investigation with a symptom-based approach for all child contacts under 15 years old in home and at the clinic. Data will be collected using routine medical files and then retrospectively abstracted by the research team. Thirty-two primary health clinics will be stratified (by TB case notification and by country) and randomized in 1:1 fashion to either community-based or facility-based delivery of care. Household child contacts under 15 years of age who screen negative for TB disease will be initiated on TPT by a healthcare worker (nurse, community health worker, etc.) either in the home or clinic setting. Children in the intervention arm who screen positive will first be sent to the nurse at the clinic for repeat screening. Children who have a persistently positive screen in the intervention arm and those with a positive screen in the control arm using South Africa's or Ethiopia's pediatric symptom screening tool will be referred to a physician at the district hospital for further investigation of TB disease, as is the standard of care in both settings. Investigators will compare clinic-level outcomes including proportion of household TB contacts under 15 years of age that were screened, initiated on TPT, and who completed TPT, and reasons for not completing TPT including loss to follow up and incident TB disease while on TPT.

NCT ID: NCT04342598 Completed - Clinical trials for Multi-drug Resistant Tuberculosis

Case Control Study of Vitamin D Status and Adult Multidrug-resistant Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Maharashtra, India

Start date: January 27, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

India has the highest incidence of and mortality from multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) globally. Vitamin D status may be an important determinant of MDR-TB infection and treatment outcomes; however, observational evidence is insufficient to support its use as an adjunct therapy or prophylaxis. Using a case-control design, this study will evaluate the relationship between vitamin D status and active MDR-TB disease among adult outpatient pulmonary MDR-TB cases, household contact controls, and matched controls from the general population (non-household controls) in Mumbai, India. This study will also evaluate the cross-sectional association between vitamin D status and TB infection among household contact controls and non-household controls, and collect formative data in preparation for future randomized controlled trials of vitamin D in MDR-TB prevention and treatment in India.

NCT ID: NCT04331262 Completed - Latent Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Implementation of an Integrated Care Strategy for Children Contacts of Patients With Tuberculosis

Start date: July 26, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Introduction: childhood tuberculosis continues to be a major public health problem, despite the fact that the visibility of the epidemic in this population group has increased, studies are still lacking that can resolve the gaps that persist. Objective: To design, implement and evaluate an integrated care strategy for children under five years old household contacts of patients with smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis in Medellín and the Metropolitan Area. Methodology: quasi-experimental study, in which around 300 children household contacts of patients with smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis from Medellín and the Metropolitan Area will be evaluated, who will be recruited in a period of one year. A subgroup of these children, estimated at 85, who require treatment for latent tuberculosis, will be offered to receive treatment for latent tuberculosis under a integrated care strategy that includes some modifications to the currently standardized scheme in Colombia, with rifampicin treatment daily oral route for four months, follow-up under the project scheme with the availability of a nurse, general practitioner, specialists, care by professionals from other disciplines such as social work, psychology, and nutritionist, and the provision of incentives (transport and food assistance). This strategy will be compared with isoniazid treatment according to the standardized scheme in the country, which was received by a cohort of children between 2015 and 2018. The study has the CIB Research Ethics Committee approval. Expected results: this project is expected to contribute with greater local evidence of integrated care strategies that allow greater compliance with treatment for latent tuberculosis in children, so that there is a real impact in the control of childhood tuberculosis and in the reduction of tuberculosis reservoirs in order to achieve the goals proposed by the World Health Organization's End TB Strategy.

NCT ID: NCT04325438 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

The Impact of Pharmacists' Interventions on the Quality of Life of HIV-TB Co-infection Outpatients in Indonesia

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

Rationale: The co-infection of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and tuberculosis (TB) diseases presents further problems to patient's adherence due to high pill burden and adverse effects in the drug combination therapy. This situation is also a risk of the increase of multi-drug resistant TB and may affect the quality of life of patients. However, the prevalence of non-adherence has not been studied much in these patients in Indonesia, especially in West Java with several HIV patients who are still struggling with TB as their opportunistic infection. Pharmacist interventions in several studies have resulted in a better outcome of patients' therapy, especially in patients who need long-term adherence and compliance with drug treatment. It is hypothesized that patients' quality of life of HIV-TB co-infection patients will be improved with the intervention conducted by the pharmacist. Objective: In general, the study aimed to evaluate the utility of study participants with specific aims to describe the number of DRP and interventions applied, to describe drug concentration in selected participants (TB drugs: Rifampicin and Pyrazinamide), to compare changes of CD4+ cell counts and plasma HIV RNA (viral load) between baseline and after of intervention, to assess participants compliance and persistence to medication therapy, and descriptive analysis on the direct and indirect costs. Study design: This is a prospective, cluster-randomized study with a stepped-wedge design. Clusters correspond to participating centers. A randomly selected center is crossed-over into the intervention with calculation after the start of inclusions within 6-months follow-up in 3 different clinics in Indonesia (Bekasi City Public Hospital, Persahabatan Public Hospital Jakarta and Cipto Mangunkusumo general hospital). Intervention: Interventions are given by a pharmacist as a drug consultant is an intervention concerning the drug treatment of HAART and anti-TB. Monthly, patients will have a discussion regarding their medication and drug-related problems they experience. The pharmacist will identify drug-related problems before and during treatment and solve the problems. Main study parameters/endpoints: change from baseline utility (quality of life) at 6 months Secondary endpoints: changes from baseline in CD4+, VL, adherence, persistence at 6 months and total costs.

NCT ID: NCT04309656 Completed - Clinical trials for Multi-drug Resistant Tuberculosis

A Study in Two Panels of Healthy Adult Participants to Assess Single-Dose Immediate-Release and Single-Dose Dispersible Formulations of Pretomanid

Start date: January 14, 2020
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a single-dose, open-label, randomized, four-period, four-treatment, crossover study in healthy adult subjects.

NCT ID: NCT04241809 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Tuberculosis Confirmation by Sputum Microscopy With or Without Culture

Bioaerosol Sampling in Suspected Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Start date: May 15, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Tuberculosis (TB) is transmitted in bioaerosols containing Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). Mtb-containing bioaerosols are likely related to host infectiousness and central to ongoing TB transmission. No routine diagnostic assay exists to measure Mtb in bioaerosols. Furthermore, published studies of Mtb in bioaerosol samples, have been limited to individuals with sputum-positive pulmonary TB. Currently TB diagnosis is based on clinical symptoms and sputum laboratory findings. However, approximately half of all patients commencing TB treatment are sputum negative resulting in a high proportion of presumptive treatments. We therefore propose to use a sensitive sampling protocol to investigate the prevalence of Mtb-containing bioaerosols in both sputum-positive and sputum-negative TB suspects.

NCT ID: NCT04239326 Completed - Clinical trials for Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

Clinical Evaluation of tNGS for Diagnosis of DR-TB

Seq&Treat
Start date: April 16, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Current rapid molecular assays for detection of drug-resistant TB from direct clinical samples have important limitations. They are not suited for high-throughput settings; can only be used to detect a limited number of target gene regions and are not ideal for detection of phenotypic resistance conferred by mutations across large gene regions (e.g. pyrazinamide). Culture-free, end-to-end targeted NGS (tNGS) Solutions for Diagnosis of Drug Resistant TB can offer higher throughput and greater accuracy across more TB drugs than current WHO endorsed molecular assays, and a significantly faster time to result than phenotypic drug susceptibility testing (DST). Evidence regarding the clinical diagnostic accuracy and operational characteristics of tNGS solutions is needed to comprehensively evaluate tNGS for diagnosis of drug-resistant TB among patients who have been diagnosed with TB, and will be critical to inform global and national policy.

NCT ID: NCT04239313 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

A Phase Ib Study of the Recombinant Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Vaccine Freeze-dried (AEC/BC02)

Start date: May 27, 2020
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Single-center, single-dose, placebo-controlled, open-label trials were used to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of low-dose adjuvants and low-dose vaccines in the upper arm deltoid muscle intramuscularly in the double negative population. Thirty (PPD-QFT-) healthy adult subjects aged 18-45 were selected and divided into placebo group, low-dose adjuvant group, and low-dose vaccine group. During the test, each subject must not change groups and inoculate drugs. Every two weeks (0-2-4-6-8-10 weeks), alternately inject a dose of placebo or left and right upper arm deltoid muscles. Low-dose adjuvant or low-dose vaccine, a total of 6 doses.

NCT ID: NCT04216420 Completed - Tuberculosis Clinical Trials

Electronic Pillbox-enabled SAT Versus DOT for TB Medication Adherence and Treatment Outcomes

SELFTB
Start date: June 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To address the multifaceted challenges associated with tuberculosis (TB) in-person directly observed therapy (DOT), the World Health Organization recently recommended countries maximize the use of digital adherence technologies. Sub-Saharan Africa needs to investigate the effectiveness of such technologies in local contexts and proactively contribute to global decisions around patient-centered TB care. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of pillbox-enabled self-administered therapy (SAT) compared to standard DOT on adherence to TB medication and treatment outcomes in Ethiopia. It also aims to assess the usability, acceptability, and cost-effectiveness (health-related quality of life and catastrophic costs) of the intervention from the patient and provider perspectives. It is designed as a multicenter, randomized, controlled, open-label, non-inferiority, effectiveness-implementation hybrid, mixed-methods, two-arm trial.

NCT ID: NCT04208789 Completed - Clinical trials for Resistance to Tuberculostatic Drugs

Artificial Inteligent for Diagnosing Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Start date: June 15, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Title: Artificial Neural Network as Diagnostic Tools For Rifampicin-Resistant Tuberculosis In Indonesia. A Predictive Model Study and Economic Evaluation. Background: Drug-resistant tuberculosis has become a global threat particularly in Indonesia. The need to increase detection, followed by appropriate treatment is a concern in dealing with these cases. The rapid molecular test (specifically for detecting rifampicin-resistant) is now being utilized in health care service, particularly at primary care level with some challenges including the lack of quality control (including how to obtained and treat the specimen properly prior to the examination) which then, affect the reliability of the results. Drug-Susceptibility Test (DST) is still, the gold standard in diagnosing drug-resistant tuberculosis but this procedure is time-consuming and costly. The artificial intelligent including data exploration and modeling is a promising method to classify potential drug-resistant cases based on the association of several factors. Objective : 1. To develop a model using an artificial intelligence approach that is able to classify the possibility of rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. 2. To assess the diagnostic ability and the accuracy of the model in comparison to existing rapid test and the gold standard 3. To evaluate the cost-effectiveness evaluation of Artificial Neural Network model in Web-Based Application in comparison with the standard diagnostic tools Methodology 1. A cross-sectional study involving all suspected drug-resistant tuberculosis cases that being referred to the study center to undergo rapid molecular test and DST test over the past 5 years. 2. A comprehensive, retrospective medical records assessment and tuberculosis individual report will be performed to obtain a variable of interest. 3. Questionnaire assessment for confirmation of insufficient information. 4. Model Building through machine learning and deep learning procedure 5. Model Validation and testing using training data set and data from the different study center Hypothesis : Artificial Intelligent Model will yield a similar or superior result of diagnostic ability compare the Rapid Molecular Test according to the Drug-Susceptibility Test. (Superiority Trial)