Tuberculosis Clinical Trial
— ACT-TBOfficial title:
Randomised Controlled Clinical Trial Investigating Benefits of Using Response to Broad Spectrum Antibiotics as an Exclusion Diagnostic for Tuberculosis (TB) in Primary Care Adult Patients Versus Risk of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR)
Verified date | April 2021 |
Source | London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This is a three-arm, open-label individually randomised controlled clinical trial investigating the benefits of the diagnostic use of broad-spectrum antimicrobials during the diagnostic process for tuberculosis (TB) and the risk of antimicrobial resistance. Adults (≥18 years) presenting to primary care with TB symptoms will, after excluding acute illness, be randomised (1:1:1) to receiving azithromycin, amoxicillin or standard care. Diagnostic accuracy will be ascertained by comparing self-reported response to treatment on Day-8 to results of mycobacteriology tests (MTB culture, smear microscopy and Xpert/MTB/RIF). Antimicrobial resistance will be ascertained by comparing arms with respect to incidence of resistant Streptococcus pneumonia carriage cultured from nasopharyngeal swabs collected on Day-28. Clinical benefit will be ascertained by comparing clinical outcomes by Day-29.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 1583 |
Est. completion date | April 14, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | March 14, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Ambulatory clinic attendees presenting with cough - Unwell for at least 14 days - Aged at least 18 years - Reside in Blantyre and willing to return to the same clinic for follow up visits over the entire study period. Exclusion Criteria: - Self-reported allergy to study medications - WHO/Malawi National tuberculosis Program (NTP) danger signs: respiratory rate > 30/min, temperature >39oC, Heart rate >120/minute, confused/agitated, respiratory distress, systolic blood pressure <90 mmHg, inability to walk unassisted - Treated with antibiotics other than co-trimoxazole prophylaxis within the past 14 days - Tuberculosis treatment or isoniazid preventive therapy within the last 6 months |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Malawi | University of Malawi College of Medicine | Blantyre | Southern |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine | University of Malawi College of Medicine |
Malawi,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Diagnostic accuracy of trial-of-antibiotics: proportion of patients without tuberculosis (by sputum tests) who report improvement of their baseline illness when asked 7 days after randomisation (Day 8 study visit). | The proportion of patients without tuberculosis (by sputum tests) who report improvement of their baseline illness when asked 7 days after randomisation (Day 8 study visit).
This can be thought of as diagnostic specificity if you take sputum test results as a reference standard and change in symptoms at Day 8 as the investigational test. In this case the possible results of the investigational test are improvement and no improvemet (no change or worsened) in response to the question: on day 1, you reported that you were unwell; compared to that day, has your illness worsened, remained the same, or improved? The mycobacteriology reference standard will be defined in participants with at least one valid sputum test result on days 1 and 8 as sputum-test-positive if there is at least one positive of smear microscopy, Xpert/MTB/RIF, or MTB culture; and as sputum-test-negative if none of the tests is positive. |
Day 1 to Day 8 | |
Primary | Clinical impact of trial-of-antibiotics | We will investigate the overall clinical impact of trial-of-antibiotics by comparing the day 29 risk of any of
death, hospitalisation, and missed tuberculosis The connection between trial-of-antibiotics and risk of hospitalisation and death assumes a protective effect of antibiotics. In patients presenting with chronic cough at primary care in high HIV prevalence settings, frequencies of mortality and hospitalization over a two months period are similar, ranging from 2 to 6%. We have included missed tuberculosis diagnosis because this too can lead to death. We are defining "missed tuberculosis" as participants who meet standard mycobacteriological and radiological tuberculosis definitions but are incorrectly classified as tuberculosis-negative and not yet on tuberculosis treatment by Day 29. |
Day 1 to Day 29 | |
Secondary | Impact of trial-of-antibiotics on antimicrobial resistance | We will use Streptococcus pneumoniae isolated from swabs of the nasopharynx as the indicator pathogen for AMR evaluation. An ecological niche for many bacterial species, the upper respiratory tract also presents a convenient window for investigating antimicrobial resistance.
We will define AMR positive as having nasopharyngeal isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae that are resistant to any of the following commonly used antibiotics: ceftriaxone, amoxycillin, cefoxitin, azithromycin, and erythromycin as determined using disc diffusion technique; and AMR negative as either (1) not isolating any Streptococcus pneumoniae or (2) isolating any Streptococcus pneumoniae that is not resistant to any of the assessed antibiotics. For each arm, and at both baseline and day 29, we will report proportion of AMR positive participants. The study outcome will be the proportion of AMR positive participants at day 29. |
Day 1 to Day 29 | |
Secondary | diagnostic value of trial-of-antibiotics in all patients including those without a valid sputum result | In this analysis, all will remain as described for primary outcome 1 except for the denominator, which will now include those without a valid sputum test result. The mycobacteriology reference standard for secondary outcome 2 will be defined as sputum test positive if at least one positive of smear microscopy, Xpert/MTB/RIF, or MTB culture from samples collected on days 1 and 8.
The reference test will be sputum-test-negative if none of the tests is positive and where there is no valid sputum test result available. The most likely reason for not having a valid sputum result will be inability to produce sputum, but other explanations will be: lost sample before laboratory analysis, an invalid laboratory reading, or contamination. We have opted to analyse this population because in symptomatic adults of the study setting, failure to produce sputum can be as high as 13%. |
Day 1 to Day 8 | |
Secondary | Economic analysis of use of trial-of-antibiotics | To estimate the incremental cost-effectiveness of trial-of-antibiotics using azithromycin and trial-of-antibiotics using amoxicillin in comparison to standard of care, and to each other using a combination of information from the following data:
Incremental cost per quality adjusted life year gained Total direct medical costs per participant Eq-5D utility score |
Day 1 to Day 29 |
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