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The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate if N-acetylcysteine (NAC) works to prevent post-tuberculosis lung disease (PTLD) in patients with severe pulmonary impairment. It also aims to assess the safety of NAC. The main questions the study aims to answer are: Does NAC improve lung function (FEV1%) over 12 months in participants with pulmonary tuberculosis and baseline risk factors for PTLD? What medical issues or adverse events do participants experience while taking NAC? Researchers will compare NAC treatment to a control group to see if it can prevent PTLD when given in addition to standard TB treatment.
Participants will: Take NAC (1800mg twice daily) for 6 months with standard TB treatment or receive standard TB treatment alone; Attend scheduled clinic visits for 12 months, during which they will have respiratory assessments, blood tests, and symptom monitoring; Complete quality-of-life questionnaires and provide sputum and blood samples for analysis at multiple time points.
Full description
Study Summary: This prospective, randomized, controlled, parallel-arm, open-label clinical trial evaluates the efficacy of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) as an adjunctive therapy for persons with pulmonary tuberculosis and risk factors for PTLD. The study aims to determine the long-term impact of NAC on lung function, respiratory symptoms, and quality of life in patients with drug-sensitive, culture-confirmed pulmonary tuberculosis (TB).
Study Rationale: Pulmonary TB is a leading cause of chronic lung impairment globally. PTLD results in significant morbidity even after successful TB treatment. Prior research suggests NAC may mitigate oxidative stress and preserve lung function in TB patients. This trial seeks to confirm and expand findings from the NAC-TB sub-study of TB Sequel regarding PTLD prevention and treatment.
This trial aims to provide robust evidence on the role of NAC in PTLD management, potentially informing future TB treatment guidelines.
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Exclusion criteria
Any condition for which participation in the trial, as judged by the investigator, could compromise the well-being of the subject or prevent, limit or confound protocol specified assessments, such as pneumothorax or clinically significant pleural effusion
Pregnancy or breast-feeding
Is critically ill, and in the judgment of the investigator has a diagnosis likely to result in death during the trial or the follow-up period.
TB meningitis or other forms of severe tuberculosis with high risk of a poor outcome as judged by the investigator.
History of allergy or hypersensitivity to any of the trial therapies or related substances, including known allergy or suspected hypersensitivity to rifampin.
Having participated in other clinical trials with investigational agents within 8 weeks prior to trial start or currently enrolled in an investigational trial.
No more than 5 days treatment for the current TB episode, and no other TB treatment in the preceding 6 months
Angina pectoris requiring treatment with nitroglycerin or other nitrates
Cardiac arrhythmia requiring medication, or any clinically significant ECG abnormality, in the opinion of the investigator
Random blood glucose >140 mg/dL (or >7.8 mmol/L), or history of unstable Diabetes Mellitus which required hospitalization for hyper- or hypoglycaemia within the past year prior to start of screening.
Use of systemic corticosteroids within the past 28 days, or a likely to require corticosteroids for management of another medical condition during the period of study participation.
Patients requiring treatment with medications not compatible with rifampin, such as HIV protease inhibitors
Subjects with any of the following abnormal laboratory values:
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242 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Fadzai E Munedzimwe, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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