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The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the all-oral, shorter-course BLMZ regimen can treat Rifampicin-Resistant Tuberculosis (RR-TB) in Chinese participants aged 12 years and older. The main questions it aims to answer are:
What is the proportion of participants with a favorable outcome at 18 months after starting the BLMZ regimen? What is the safety profile of the BLMZ regimen, as measured by the incidence of Grade 3 or higher adverse events and serious adverse events during the treatment period? This is a single-arm study, so there is no comparison group. Researchers will compare the study results to historical data to see if the BLMZ regimen shows sufficient efficacy and safety in the Chinese population.
Participants will:
Undergo screening tests to confirm eligibility, including tests for TB bacteria and drug resistance.
Receive the BLMZ regimen (Bedaquiline, Linezolid, Moxifloxacin/Levofloxacin, and Pyrazinamide) orally for 9 months.
Attend regular clinic visits for safety assessments, medication refills, and tests (e.g., sputum tests, blood tests, ECG, CT scans) during the 9-month treatment period and then every 3 months during a 15-month post-treatment follow-up period until 24 months after starting the treatment.
Full description
Study Rationale and Background:
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a significant global health threat, with Rifampicin-Resistant TB (RR-TB) posing a particularly severe challenge due to prolonged treatment durations, high toxicity, and suboptimal success rates. While the standard of care in China has historically involved 18-20 month regimens, the World Health Organization (WHO) has recently endorsed shorter, all-oral regimens. The BLMZ regimen, composed of Bedaquiline (B), Linezolid (L), Moxifloxacin (M), and Pyrazinamide (Z), demonstrated high efficacy (89% favorable outcome) in the global endTB trial. However, prospective data on its application and performance in the Chinese population are lacking. This study aims to bridge this evidence gap by prospectively evaluating the efficacy, safety, and feasibility of the 9-month BLMZ regimen in a Chinese RR-TB cohort, thereby informing national policy and clinical practice.
Study Design:
This is a prospective, multicenter, single-arm, open-label, interventional study. The study employs a Bayesian statistical framework with a pre-specified success threshold to evaluate the primary efficacy endpoint. Historical data from the endTB study (BLMZ arm) will be incorporated using a power prior model to augment the statistical analysis, allowing for more robust inference with the planned sample size.
Intervention:
Participants will receive the all-oral BLMZ regimen for a total of 9 months. The regimen consists of:
Drug doses are adjusted according to pre-specified weight bands. Treatment may be extended to a maximum of 11 months under specific conditions (e.g., positive culture at Month 2, unclosed cavity at Month 9).
Study Population and Follow-up:
The study will enroll approximately 120 participants aged ≥12 years with bacteriologically confirmed pulmonary RR-TB who are susceptible to fluoroquinolones. Participants may be either treatment-naïve or previously treated for drug-susceptible TB.
The study duration for each participant is 24 months, comprising:
Screening Period: Up to 4 weeks. Treatment Period: 9 months (extendable to 11 months), with monthly on-site visits for clinical, bacteriological (sputum smear and culture), and safety assessments (including hematology, biochemistry, electrolytes, visual acuity, peripheral neuropathy screening, and 12-lead ECG). Chest CT scans are performed at baseline, Month 5, and Month 8.
Post-Treatment Follow-up Period: 15 months, with quarterly visits until Month 24. Follow-up focuses on long-term efficacy and safety, primarily through sputum culture for relapse detection.
Key Technical and Operational Considerations:
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
(Note: If the investigator judges that the benefit of participating in this study is higher and obtains the participant's consent, the prohibited medication should be discontinued with an adequate washout period before participation.)
Known history of hypersensitivity to any drug in the protocol.
Current participation in any other investigational drug clinical trial.
Presence of cardiovascular disease risk at screening:
History of optic neuropathy or peripheral neuropathy, which in the investigator's opinion may progress/worsen during the study or is unsuitable for study participation.
Evidence of liver disease at screening:
History of renal disease or renal disease-related manifestations at screening:
Other laboratory abnormalities at screening:
Pregnant or breastfeeding.
Any other condition (e.g., severe psychiatric disorder, neurological condition, substance abuse) that, in the opinion of the investigator, would make the participant unsuitable for the study or unable to adhere to the protocol.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
Masking
120 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Wenjuan Nie, Medical Doctor, Professor; Naihui Chu, Medical Doctor, Professor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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