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Tuberculous Meningitis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Tuberculous Meningitis.

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NCT ID: NCT05781646 Completed - Clinical trials for Tuberculous Meningitis

Xpert MTB/RIF Assay for Diagnosis of Tuberculous Meningitis (TBM) in Maharaj Nakorn Chiang Mai Hospital

Start date: January 1, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment of tuberculous meningitis (TBM) are crucial steps to reduce morbidity and mortality. The WHO recommended to use Xpert MTB/RIF assay to diagnose pulmonary TB, pediatrics TB, extra pulmonary TB and rifampicin resistance. However, the data of accuracy in diagnosis of TBM is still lacking. This study aimed to find out the diagnostic performance of Xpert MTB/RIF assay for the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis, especially in patients who presented with subacute lymphocytic meningitis.

NCT ID: NCT03226379 Completed - Clinical trials for Cryptococcal Meningitis

Driving Reduced AIDS-associated Meningo-encephalitis Mortality

DREAMM
Start date: April 23, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The DREAMM project is investigating whether the DREAMM interventions (1) Health system strengthening, 2) Co-designed education programs tailored to frontline healthcare workers, 3) Implementation of a diagnostic and treatment algorithm and, 4) Communities of practice in infectious diseases and laboratory capacity building) when combined reduce two week all-cause mortality of HIV-associated meningo-encephalitis in African LMICs.

NCT ID: NCT03092817 Completed - HIV Clinical Trials

Adjunctive Corticosteroids for Tuberculous Meningitis in HIV-infected Adults (The ACT HIV Trial)

Start date: May 25, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The investigators will conduct a randomized, double blind, placebo controlled trial of adjunctive dexamethasone in the initial (6-8 weeks) treatment of tuberculous meningitis in Vietnamese adults. The trial will address a primary hypothesis in all enrolled patients, and a secondary hypothesis in a sub-group of enrolled patients who develop anti-tuberculosis drug-induced liver injury (DILI). The primary hypothesis is adjunctive dexamethasone increases survival from TBM in HIV co-infected adults. The secondary hypothesis is current guidelines for the management of anti-tuberculosis drug-induced liver injury in those with TBM result in the premature interruption of rifampicin and isoniazid (the critical active drugs in early therapy) and are thereby placing participants at risk of poor outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT02237365 Completed - Clinical trials for Tuberculous Meningitis

A Pilot Study of Adjunctive Aspirin for the Treatment of HIV Negative Adults With Tuberculous Meningitis

AspirinTBM
Start date: October 17, 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Tuberculous meningitis is a severe brain infection which often causes disability and death even when treated with the best available treatment. Aspirin is a type of anti-inflammation drug which can reduce the inflammatory response in brains of patients with tuberculous meningitis, and therefore may decrease some of the most severe outcomes. This study compares the use of aspirin (at 2 different doses) versus placebo as an additional therapy to the standard treatment to see if aspirin is safe and helpful in reducing disability and death from tuberculous meningitis. Patients will be treated with aspirin or placebo for 60 days and followed up while on standard treatment for 8 months.

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: NCT01371916 Completed - Clinical trials for Tuberculous Meningitis

Diagnosis of Tuberculous Meningitis by ESAT-6 in CSF

Start date: September 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Early and reliable diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis (TBM) still poses a great challenge. One of the underlying difficulties is due to the fact that tubercle bacilli are mainly not present in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) but in the phagocytotic macrophages. The present study was designed to demonstrate early secretory antigenic target 6 (ESAT-6), a mycobacterium-specific antigens, in the macrophages in infected CSF samples and compare the efficiency of this antigen in the laboratory diagnosis of TBM.