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Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are environmental organisms found in soil and water. The majority do not cause human disease. When they do, this is mostly as a chronic lung infection in people with long-term lung problems such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), bronchiectasis, or cystic fibrosis. The number of people with NTM pulmonary disease (PD) is increasing, and its management can be complex, requiring prolonged treatment with multiple, often toxic, drugs in someone who may already be frail.
Non-drug approaches, such as airway clearance techniques, structured exercise, nutritional support and psychological care are used to help manage bronchiectasis and COPD. However, there is limited evidence about their benefit in people with NTM-PD. Also, it is not clear whether these patients' health needs are different from people with bronchiectasis alone.
The investigators want to identify the most important symptoms encountered by people with NTM-PD and patient preferences for care. The study also aims to explore whether the need for non-drug measures differs between people with and without NTM-PD who have other underlying lung disease.
The research will take place at one NHS centre and involve a single assessment of 40 people with NTM-PD not using specific antibiotics to treat their NTM and 40 people with bronchiectasis but no evidence for NTM. Following consent, and mainly using questionnaires, participants will be asked about their physical and mental health, and nutritional status. Exercise capacity, muscle strength and body muscle/fat composition will also be assessed using simple tests. The total time required will be a maximum of one hour. Recruitment to the study will last around six months.
The results will help improve understanding of specific needs of people with NTM-PD and guide clinically relevant research in this area.
Full description
Nontuberculous mycobacteria are environmental organisms primarily found in soil and water, including locations such as lakes, rivers, agricultural zones, and some industrial sites. Environmental changes facilitate the transport of these organisms to many different settings, including external and internal living spaces. NTM are separate from the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (the cause of tuberculosis) and are not the mycobacteria that cause leprosy. With around 200 species, these organisms can be classified into slow growing mycobacteria (SGM ≥ 7 days) or rapid growing mycobacteria (RGM < 7 days), based on their growth rate in solid culture medium. M. avium, M. kansasii, M. xenopi, and M. abscessus are the most common NTM species that can cause pulmonary disease. Unlike M. tuberculosis these mycobacteria are not pathogens, but in the right setting, they can infect humans and produce clinical disease. This is most often seen in people with pre-existing lung damage due to bronchiectasis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), or cystic fibrosis, and NTM infection results in worsening health, and the development of a chronic respiratory illness, NTM-PD.
This study is designed to explore the impact of non-tuberculous mycobacteria-pulmonary disease (NTM-PD) on patients' health, to explore what symptoms are of most concern to people with NTM-PD and to better characterise what non-pharmacological interventions might help this patient group.
The study questions guiding this research are:
This will be accomplished by integrating validated Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) with radiological evaluation and respiratory assessments. Additionally, a self-reported questionnaire will be used to rank the most significant symptoms associated with NTM-PD, as well as the daily living activities affected, from the patients' perspective.
The findings could reveal key differences in clinical features and symptoms between these groups, helping to optimise non-pharmacological interventions, improve treatment plans for people with NTM-PD, and highlight areas for future research.
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Inclusion criteria
- Age: 18 years or older, able to provide informed consent.
NTM-PD Group:
Participants will be adults diagnosed with confirmed NTM-PD based on the British Thoracic Society (BTS) guidelines.
The participant should not be on any antimicrobial therapy (at least two weeks before participation) and should not have previously received or be currently on antimicrobial therapy for NTM-PD.
* BTS guidelines:
Clinical (both required):
Pulmonary symptoms, nodular or cavitary opacities on chest radiograph, or a high-resolution CT scan that shows multifocal bronchiectasis with multiple small nodules.
Appropriate exclusion of other diagnoses.
Microbiological:
A minimum of two positive expectorated sputum culture results of the same NTM species from samples collected on separate days within 12 months before recruitment.
OR
Bronchiectasis Group:
Exclusion criteria
- Age: Under 18 years of age, or unable to provide informed consent.
NTM-PD Group:
Bronchiectasis Group:
80 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Naif S Sulaiman, PhD Candidate
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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