Assessment of the Safety, Tolerability, and Effectiveness of Rifapentine Given Daily for LTBI
Latent TuberculosisThis study is conducted to compare the safety and effectiveness of a novel short 6-week regimen of daily rifapentine (6wP, experimental arm) with a comparator arm of 12-16 weeks of rifamycin-based treatment (standard of care, control arm) of latent M. tuberculosis infection (LTBI). This trial is conducted among persons who are at increased risk of progression to tuberculosis (TB) and require treatment of LTBI. The study will be conducted in low, medium and high TB incidence settings that have treatment of LTBI as their standard of care and offer 12-16 week rifamycin-based therapy as standard of care. The hypothesis of this study is that the safety and effectiveness of the experimental treatment (6wP arm) is non-inferior to a comparator arm of 12-16 weeks of rifamycin-based treatment of LTBI (control arm). Participants are enrolled and randomly assigned to one of the two study arms: experimental 6wP or control. The comparator (control) arm's treatment regimens include 12 weeks of once-weekly isoniazid (INH) and rifapentine (3HP), 12 weeks of daily INH and rifampin (3HR), and 16 weeks of daily rifampin (4R). A total of 560 participants per arm (1,120 total) for the evaluation of safety and 1,700 participants per arm (3,400 total) for the evaluation of effectiveness will be enrolled, given treatment as per randomization assignment, and followed for 24 months from the date of enrollment. After completion of data collection, statistical analyses will be conducted to compare proportions of drug discontinuation due to adverse drug reaction (ADR) and proportions of newly diagnosed tuberculosis between 6wP and control arm.
Evaluating the Pharmacokinetics, Safety, and Tolerability of Delamanid in Combination With Optimized...
TuberculosisHIV InfectionsThis study will evaluate the pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability of the anti-tuberculosis (TB) drug delamanid (DLM) in combination with an optimized multidrug background regimen (OBR) for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected children with MDR-TB.
Novel Triple-dose Tuberculosis Retreatment Regimen
Multidrug-resistant TuberculosisPulmonary Tuberculosis2 moreTo determine if a high-dose first-line regimen is non-inferior (non-inferiority margin 10%) in terms of safety to the same regimen at regular dosing, in previously treated patients with rifampicin-susceptible recurrent Tuberculosis (TB).
Pharmacokinetics of Twice or Once Daily DTG (50mg) in Children With HIV and TB
TuberculosisHivStage 1 proposed study will provide evidence to support the use of twice-daily dose 50mg DTG in children (20-35kgs) co-treated with RIF.
Clinical Trial to Investigate Therapeutic Vaccine (RUTI) Against Tuberculosis (TB)
TuberculosisPulmonaryProspective, randomized, double-blind, multicentre, placebo-controlled clinical phase IIb trial to evaluate efficacy of RUTI® vaccine in DS- (Drug-Sensitive) and MDR-TB (Multidrug-resistant) patients favourably responding to standard MDR-TB treatment. Time point of vaccination starts upon completion of 1 week of standard DS-TB treatment (cohort A), and another cohort of patients will be vaccinated upon completion of 1 month of standard MDR-TB treatment (cohort B). All the patients will be followed up to the end of the treatment.
Testing New Strategies for Patients Hospitalised With HIV-associated Disseminated Tuberculosis
Disseminated TuberculosisHIVThe New Strat-TB trial is a superiority Phase III randomised control clinical trial with a 2X2 factorial design. The main aim of the study is to assess the efficacy and safety of high dose rifampicin and levofloxacin for 14 days in addition to standard TB therapy with or without steroids among adults hospitalized with HIV-associated disseminated tuberculosis. The investigators hypothesize that intensified treatment with increased rifampicin doses at 35 mg/kg plus levofloxacin will more rapidly reduce the mycobacterial load. The investigators also hypothesize that steroids will have an immune-modulatory effect and dampen the activation of the innate immune system. The investigators hypothesize that these two strategies will lead to improved survival in patients hospitalized with HIV-associated disseminated tuberculosis.
Applying Shear Wave Elastography for Adjunct Steroid on Tuberculous Lymphadenitis
Tuberculous LymphadenitisTo prospectively collect the radiologic data from the initial phase till the post-treatment phase of tuberculous lymphadenitis. To prospectively investigate the benefits of corticosteroid on reduction of paradoxical upgrading reaction in patients with tuberculous lymphadenitis based on the results of shear wave elastography. To investigate the potential biomarker of host immunity in response to tuberculosis and predict the development of paradoxical upgrading reaction.
Efficacy and Safety Evaluation of Two to Four Months of Treatment With the Combination Regimens...
Pulmonary TuberculosisThis multicenter, two-stage, open-label, randomized trial will aim to assess the efficacy, safety, optimal duration, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of Delamanid, Bedaquiline, OPC-167832, and Sutezolid (DBOS) and Pretomanid, Bedaquiline, OPC-167832, and Sutezolid (PBOS) in adult participants with drug sensitive tuberculosis (DS-TB) and rifampicin or multi-drug resistant TB (RR/MDR-TB).
Safety and Tolerability of Chlorquine in Addition to Anti-tuberculosis Therapy
Tuberculosis InfectionIn 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.
Evaluating the Pharmacokinetics, Safety, and Tolerability of Bedaquiline in Infants, Children, and...
TuberculosisHIVP1108 is a Phase I/II, open-label, single-arm, exposure-controlled dose finding study of BDQ in infants, children, and adolescents living with and without HIV, with clinically diagnosed or bacteriologically confirmed rifampin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB). The study is designed to evaluate the PK, safety, and tolerability of BDQ over 24 weeks.