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To assess outcome of treatment and safety among patients with rifampicin-resistant isoniazid-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis treated with a novel regimen consisting of isoniazid, bedaquiline, and moxifloxacin throughout for 6 months, supplemented by pyrazinamide for the initial 2 months.
Full description
Rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB) could be classified into rifampicin-resistant, isoniazid-susceptible TB (RrHs-TB) and rifampicin-resistant, isoniazid-resistant TB (MDR-TB), that is MDR-TB. RrHs-TB and MDR-TB are different because isoniazid has potent early bactericidal activity (EBA) and remains susceptible in RrHs-TB.
The standard first line anti-TB regimen recommended by WHO consisting of isoniazid and rifampicin throughout for 6 months supplemented by pyrazinamide and ethambutol for the initial 2 months (2HRZE/4HR). The duration of treatment of the first line standard 6-month regimen is mainly determined by the sterilization power of the core drug, namely rifampicin, paired with pyrazinamide. Moxifloxacin had potent EBA that is comparable to that of isoniazid. Bedaquiline has delayed onset of action but after a few days of treatment its EBA is comparable to that of isoniazid and rifampicin. Both moxifloxacin and bedaquiline have potent sterilizing activity.
To avoid the use of a toxic MDR-TB regimen, we hypothesize that the combination of bedaquiline and moxifloxacin is non inferior to rifampicin in terms of EBA and sterilizing activity, and could be used to substitute for rifampicin in the standard first line anti-TB regimen (2HRZE/4HR) as a novel approach for the treatment of RrHs-TB, as well as TB patients for whom rifamycin is intolerable (Ri-TB) and TB patients for whom rifamycin-sparing anti-TB regimens are preferred due to drug-drug interaction (Rs-TB).
Trial intervention
The novel regimen will be given in two phases:
Selection of patients
The target population is:
Patients diagnosed with rifampicin-resistant isoniazid-susceptible TB (RrHs-TB),
The following two type of patients will also be enrolled because rifamycin will not be used in the treatment of TB
Patients diagnosed with susceptible TB who are not able to tolerate rifampicin due to adverse reactions, in whom rifabutin is intolerable or clinically not indicated (Ri-TB),
Patients with TB for whom rifampicin-sparing anti-TB regimens is preferred (such as organ transplant recipients) due to drug-drug interaction (Rs-TB).
Type of design
This is a prospective open-label single-group study that participants will be treated with a novel regimen.
Trial objectives
The primary objectives of the trial are:
Outcome measures
The primary efficacy outcome measure is the proportion of patients with a favourable outcome at 12 months (53 weeks) post treatment initiation.
A patient's outcome will be classified as favourable if they have a negative culture result 12 months (53 weeks) after treatment initiation not having been previously classified as unfavourable.
A patient's outcome will be classified as unfavourable if:
The primary safety outcome measure is the proportion of patients experiencing a grade 3 or greater adverse event, as defined by the CTCAE criteria except hyperuricemia which will be defined by the DAIDS criteria, during treatment and follow-up to 12 months (53 weeks) post treatment initiation.
Secondary outcome measures include:
Sample Size
We adopt the approach of the Nix-TB study and the ZeNix trial and hypothesize that the proportion of patients with favourable efficacy outcomes at 12 months (53 weeks) after treatment initiation would be greater than 50%. The trial does not have a control group. A sample of 45 participants would provide more than 90% power to demonstrate that the lower boundary of the 95% confidence interval is greater than 50%, using a two-sided 5% significance level. We plan to expand the enrollment to at least 80 patients to assess the primary efficacy of the study regimen.
Analysis population definitions
Intention-to-treat (ITT)
All enrolled patients will be included in the ITT analysis population.
Safety population
All patients who have taken at least one dose of trial treatment will be included in the safety analysis population.
Modified intention-to-treat (mITT)
The mITT population is defined as all enrolled patients that have a positive culture for M. tuberculosis on LJ or MGIT media at screening, with the exception of rifampicin-resistant isoniazid susceptible TB patients with isolates taken before treatment initiation that are subsequently found to be susceptible to rifampicin, and patients with isolates taken before treatment initiation that are subsequently found to be resistant to fluoroquinolones on phenotypic DST. Whole genome sequencing will be done for strains with discordant results between phenotypic and genotypic methods. Results from the national reference mycobacteriology laboratory of Taiwan CDC will take priority over any results from local laboratories where available.
Per protocol (PP)
The PP population will be the same as the mITT population with the exclusion of patients not completing a protocol-adherent course of treatment, other than for treatment failure or death. Treatment failure is defined as failure to attain and maintain culture negativity until the end of allocated treatment.
Definition of a protocol-adherent course of treatment
Patients will be excluded from the per-protocol analysis if they do not complete a protocol adherent course of treatment, other than for treatment failure or death.
A patient will have completed a protocol-adherent course of treatment when they have taken 80% of doses within 120% of the minimum duration in both the intensive phase and in the whole treatment period. For this purpose, a dose is defined as all the study medications at the correct dose for that particular day.
For the study Regimen, with or without an extension, a patient will have completed a protocol-adherent course of treatment if they have taken:
Statistical significance
P value <0.05 will be considered statistically significant in this trial.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
A patient will be eligible for entry to the study if he/she:
Exclusion criteria
A patient will not be eligible for entry to the study if he/she:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
100 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Chen-Yuan Chiang, MD PhD MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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