Tuberculosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Feasibility of Using the Inverness Lateral Flow Urine LAM Test for Diagnosis of Tuberculosis in HIV-Positive TB Suspects
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the accuracy, diagnostic yield, operational
performance, and time to diagnosis of a novel lateral-flow urine lipoarabinomannan (LAM)
test in detecting tuberculosis in HIV-infected adults.
A secondary study objective is to determine the accuracy, efficiency, costs, and
cost-effectiveness of various combinations of Tuberculosis (TB) diagnostic tests, including
the novel Xpert MTB/Rif test.
Background: Tuberculosis (TB) incidence and mortality have increased dramatically as a
result of the HIV epidemic. In parts of sub-Saharan Africa, TB is the leading cause of death
among HIV-infected patients and approximately 50% of TB patients are HIV co-infected. Early
treatment of TB is hindered by the lack of rapid, accurate diagnostic modalities that can be
applied in resource-constrained settings. Mycobacterial culture is the laboratory standard
for diagnosis of active TB, but it is costly, requires access to specialized laboratories,
and takes weeks to provide results. Sputum smear microscopy detects less than half of
HIV-infected TB cases in many settings. The Global Plan to Stop TB has prioritized the
development of simple, accurate, inexpensive tests for TB case detection in HIV-positive
individuals.
LAM: As a strategy for rapid TB diagnosis, the detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
antigens has been explored over several decades. Lipoarabinomannan (LAM), a glycolipid
component of the outer cell wall of mycobacteria, is an attractive diagnostic target for
several reasons: it is heat-stable; cleared by the kidney; detectable in urine; and as a
bacterial product, has the theoretical potential to discriminate active TB from latent TB
infection independent of human immune responses. A urine test could facilitate TB diagnosis
in patients in whom sputum is uninformative or not obtainable, and lacks the
infection-control risks associated with sputum production or blood collection. Urine LAM
detection may be amenable to simple, rapid, inexpensive point-of-care platforms.
This is a prospective study to evaluate the accuracy, diagnostic yield, operational
performance, and time to diagnosis of a novel lateral-flow urine LAM test in detecting
tuberculosis in HIV-infected adults. HIV-positive adults suspected to have TB will be
enrolled after providing informed consent. Urine will be obtained for testing using the
novel lateral flow urine LAM assay and an existing ELISA-based urine LAM assay. Conventional
microbiological tests for TB and chest x-rays will also be performed. These tests will be
performed on all participants enrolled (target sample size = 500).
A secondary study objective is to determine the accuracy, efficiency, costs, and
cost-effectiveness of various combinations of TB diagnostic tests, including the novel Xpert
MTB/Rif test. The Xpert MTB/Rif test will be performed on a subset of participants
(approximately 200 participants out of the total of 500 participants we expect to enroll for
the LAM component of the study.)
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Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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