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About
Tuberculosis (TB) continues to be one of the most serious bacterial infections worldwide and therefore new improved diagnostic tests are needed to help doctors in diagnosing TB.
The new skin test is named C-Tb. Like the current tuberculin skin test, PPD, the C-Tb test is injected just under the skin and will, when positive, show redness and/or swelling at the injection site while a negative test will leave no reactions. The investigators hope that this new C-Tb skin test will be more precise (specific) than the PPD test, as the PPD test e.g. may show a reaction if the person tested is BCG vaccinated.
The aim of this trial is to test the C-Tb skin test in volunteers suspected of having TB disease.
With focus on age, HIV status and CD4 count the following analyses are done (in an overall perspective):
Full description
The TESEC-05 trial is an open comparison of the diagnostics performance of C-Tb compared to the QuantiFERON®-TB Gold In-Tube, in combination with a double-blind randomized split-body safety assessment of C-Tb versus to 2 T.U. Tuberculin PPD RT23 SSI.
The trial is a multi-centre Phase III clinical trial designed specifically to address C-Tb in relation to the paediatric population and to HIV infection. The intention is to evaluate how the C-Tb test performs in the paediatric population with respect to safety, and to ensure that SSI will be able to extrapolate data obtained in an adult population to the paediatric population.
Furthermore, the intention is both to evaluate the diagnostic performance and safety of C-Tb in HIV infected individuals and to evaluate whether SSI will be able to extrapolate data obtained in a non-HIV population to a HIV population.
The trial population will consist of paediatric participants with suspected TB infection and adult participants suspected to have TB disease. Furthermore a control group of 100 children between 5 - 11 years of age with no symptoms or known exposure will be recruited from an area with a "low" prevalence of TB (an area with an incidence rate < 299/100,000 per year, the average rate of TB in South Africa in 2005 was 645/100,000 per year.
The trial will be conducted in South Africa where the prevalence of HIV infection is high and MTb infections are endemic.
BCG vaccination at birth has been common practice since 1961 in South Africa. Thus most of the participants are presumed BCG vaccinated.
Enrollment
Sex
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Inclusion criteria
HIV NEGATIVE PARTICIPANTS:
HIV POSITIVE PARTICIPANTS:
Participants between 5 and 65 years attending the TB clinic due to suspicion of TB disease
Infants, toddlers and children between 28 days and 4 years must either have symptoms* or signs** of TB or be in close contact to a smear positive pulmonary TB case (more than 6 hours/day for at least five days)
Is between 28 days and 65 years of age
Participant, parent or legal guardian has signed the informed consent
Is HIV positive confirmed by:
A CD4 count has been done
Is willing and likely to comply with the trial procedures
Is prepared to grant authorized persons access to their medical record
HIV NEGATIVE CONTROL GROUP:
Exclusion criteria
HIV NEGATIVE PARTICIPANTS:
HIV POSITIVE PARTICIPANTS:
HIV NEGATIVE CONTROL GROUP:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,190 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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