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About
Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is tuberculosis (TB) that is resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampicin, the two most important anti-TB drugs. It occurs in 3.6% of newly diagnosed TB patients in the world and 17% of patients who have been previously treated. In 2017, approximately 600,000 people were estimated to have acquired MDR-TB. However, only 25% of persons with MDR-TB were diagnosed and started on treatment, reflecting inadequate diagnostic capacity and lack of TB treatment capacity.
In this multicenter, randomized, partially blinded, four-arm, phase 2 study, the investigators will examine the efficacy and safety of an all-oral regimen of bedaquiline, delamanid, levofloxacin, linezolid, and clofazimine given for 16, 24, 32 or 40 weeks
Full description
Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is tuberculosis that is resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampicin, the two most important drugs in treating TB. In 2017, approximately 558,000 new people were estimated to have developed MDR-TB, and 8.5% of the cases had extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB).(1) Current WHO-endorsed MDR-TB treatment regimens take 9-20 months to complete and are associated with substantial toxicity, including deafness from injectable agents, hepatitis from pyrazinamide and severe neuropathy from linezolid. Given the long duration and toxicities of MDR-TB regimens, it is perhaps not surprising that WHO reports that only 25% of patients with MDR-TB are enrolled into WHO-endorsed treatment regimens. Thus, there is an urgent need for shorter, less toxic treatments for MDR-TB. This proposal will determine the efficacy, safety, tolerability and optimal duration of a novel, all oral MDR-TB treatment regimen while addressing three major challenges with innovations that have the potential to transform future trials.
The proposed DRAMATIC (Duration Randomized Anti-MDR-TB And Tailored Intervention Clinical) Trial is a multicenter, randomized, partially blinded, four-arm, phase 2 trial that will examine an injectable- and pyrazinamide-sparing regimen of bedaquiline, delamanid, levofloxacin, linezolid, and clofazimine. The DRAMATIC regimen limits the administration of linezolid to the initial 8 weeks of treatment, the window before linezolid-related neuropathy occurs. Animal and human studies provide evidence for the potential efficacy of this 5-drug regimen, but the optimal duration of treatment remains uncertain.(2-4)
Primary Objectives:
Describe the relationship between the duration of the experimental regimen and the proportion of participants with sustained cure at 76 weeks after randomization without treatment failure or relapse.
Describe the relationship between baseline prognostic risk strata and sustained cure at 76 weeks after randomization without treatment failure or relapse.
Evaluate the association between novel biologic markers and sustained cure at 76 weeks after randomization without treatment failure or relapse.
Secondary Objectives:
Identify the shortest duration of the study regimen that has acceptable safety and efficacy for a Phase 3 clinical trial of the DRAMATIC regimen for treatment of MDR-TB.
Describe the frequency, magnitude, time course of and risk factors for QTc prolongation associated with the study regimen.
Demonstrate the feasibility and efficiency of implementing the new duration-randomized design in a multi-centre randomized trial of drug-resistant TB.
Determine if time to sputum culture conversion predicts optimal duration of treatment when stratified by extent of disease.
Describe the relationship between the duration of the experimental regimen and the proportion of participants with sustained cure at 104 weeks after randomization without treatment failure or relapse.
Assess vital status at 132 weeks post randomization.
Development of a shorter, better-tolerated treatment regimen will greatly enhance the ability of TB control programs to treat the growing number of patients. The DRAMATIC Trial will employ an innovative and efficient new design to establish a robust, nontoxic MDR-TB treatment regimen and identify the minimal duration for which it needs to be administered. These results will speed the process of moving forward to a confirmatory phase 3 clinical trial and increase the likelihood that such a trial is successful.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Current MTB isolate is known at screening to be fluoroquinolone-resistant.
History of allergy (hypersensitivity) or intolerability to one or more agents in the investigational regimens (i.e., Arms 1 and 2)
History of serotonin syndrome
History of symptomatic ventricular arrhythmia or is taking anti-arrhythmic agents
History of optic neuropathy or peripheral neuropathy
History of Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, Marfan Syndrome or aortic aneurism
History of prior treatment with delamanid or linezolid for TB for greater than one month.
Has at screening received ≥14 days of second-line anti-TB drugs during current TB episode
Has at screening a Karnofsky score of ≤40 or, in the opinion of the Investigator, is unlikely to survive 76 weeks.
Has at screening laboratory results that meet one or more of the following criteria:
For women of childbearing potential, has a positive or indeterminate urine pregnancy test on the day of randomization.
Has at screening a mean QTcF >450 msec based on three ECGs.
At screening requires ongoing use of prohibited drugs indicated in section 4.2
At screening, has weight less than 33 Kg
In the investigator's judgement is unable to provide consent (if ≥18 years of age) or unable to provide assent (if >12 years of age).
History of congestive heart failure
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
220 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Charles Horsburgh, MD; Pawandeep Kaur, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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