View clinical trials related to Tuberculosis.
Filter by:In vitro and in vivo data show promising results of adjunctive use of Chloroquine to standard tuberculosis therapy as Chloroquine enhances animicrobial effectiveness against intracellular MTB. To date, no safety data of the concurrent use of both treatments is availble. In a phase I trial, the investigators aim to evaluate safety and tolerability of the concurrent use of Chloroquine and standard anti-TB drug in healthy volunteers.
This prospective study aims to determine the incidence of Post-tuberculosis lung damage (PTLD), examine trends in the changes in lung function, and investigate the impact of smoking and other factors on respiratory symptoms, lung function, and chest CT findings, which will aid in the development of prognostic and therapeutic strategies for PTLD.
In Sub-Saharan Africa, lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) and tuberculosis (TB) jointly are the leading cause of overall mortality. There is a need to integrate sustainable triage and management strategies into standard care. The TrUST study investigates the utility of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) for diagnosis and prognosis of LRTIs in TB endemic regions in the outpatient triage setting. Automated interpretation of POCUS by artificial intelligence (AI) may further standardize and improve its predictive utility as well as facilitate its implementation into usual practice.
This trial is designed to determine whether modifying the dose of isoniazid for individuals according to their n-acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2) genotype could increase the probability of achieving equivalence of area-under-the-curve.
This is a prospective, single-center, single-arm, open-label study investigating the safety, compliance and pharmacokinetics of 1-month treatment of Isoniazid, Rifapentine and Vitamin B6 in renal transplant candidates.
Tuberculosis (TB) whole genome sequencing (WGS) allows outbreak identification and disease transmission tracking. It is hypothesized that prospective WGS-guided epidemiological investigations improve case detection compared to current best practices by adapting contact tracing strategies to local transmission patterns. A cluster randomized controlled trial (cRCT) will be performed in high TB incidence villages of Haute Matsiatra region in Madagascar. Communities will be randomized in three separate TB control strategies comparing (1) standard of care, (2) the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended best practices and (3) a novel intervention involving TB WGS cluster-guided epidemiological investigations. The incremental value of TB WGS on case notifications and reduction of TB burden will be measured. Secondary studies will be nested within this cRCT will include: - A qualitative study which will increase the understanding of the factors facilitating and hindering implementation of WGS-based diagnostics within health systems. - A cost effectiveness analysis study which will measure the cost effectiveness of newly implemented laboratory methods. Field and genomic epidemiology data from this project will inform future work on the design of community-level TB elimination strategies in collaboration with Madagascar National TB program
Tuberculosis (TB) remains the most important infectious disease in the world. A major barrier to tuberculosis control is poor adherence to long-term and complex treatment regimens. This is a multicenter prospective, non-inferiority randomized controlled study. The purpose of our study is a) to evaluate the tolerability, efficacy and pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics (PK/PD) of the high-dose rifapentine, b) to evaluate whether the high-dose rifapentine-containing regimen has the potential to treat the rifampicin-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis and shorten the course of treatment to 17 weeks. This study is of great significance for shortening the course of treatment, reducing the adverse reactions and economic burden of patients' treatment in rifampicin-sensitive tuberculosis patient.
Tuberculous pleuritis (TBP) is the most common manifestation of extrapulmonary TB. Its diagnosis is challenging due to the low sensitivity of mycobacterial culture from the pleural fluid and the need for invasive pleural biopsy. Preliminary data has shown the superior sensitivity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis cell-free DNA (MTB cfDNA) to conventional culture and MTB polymerase chain reaction (PCR), but the cutoff level of MTB cfDNA was not determined. This study involves a prospective collection of pleural fluid due to TBP and non-TBP aetiologies, with subsequent testing by MTB culture, MTB cfDNA and MTB PCR. The levels of MTB cfDNA in the pleural fluid will be correlated with different types of diagnosis, and its diagnostic accuracy will be compared with conventional culture and MTB PCR. A confirmatory study result of MTB cfDNA can shorten the time to diagnosis, reduce the need for pleural biopsy and prevent the delay of definitive treatment.
To evaluate the 2-week bactericidal activity, pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of sanfetrinem cilexetil in participants with rifampicin-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis.
The purpose of this study is to compare a 6-month regimen of high-dose rifampicin (RIF), high-dose isoniazid (INH), linezolid (LZD), and pyrazinamide (PZA) versus the World Health Organization (WHO) standard of care (SOC) treatment for tuberculosis meningitis (TBM).