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Surveillance and Follow-up for Latent Tuberculosis Infection and Risk of Developing Active Tuberculosis in Patients Receiving Long-term Dialysis

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National Taiwan University

Status

Completed

Conditions

To Predict the Potential of Development of Active Tuberculosis in Those Receiving Long-term Dialysis by Using Interferon-gamma Release Assy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01311999
201009057R

Details and patient eligibility

About

To follow-up the latent tuberculosis infection and the risk of developing active tuberculosis in patients receiving long-term dialysis

Full description

Tuberculosis (TB) remains an important infectious disease worldwide. Taiwan is still an edemic area. In 2008, there is an incidence of 62 persons having TB per 100,000 population. To control TB, we should prevent further TB transmission via early diagnosis and treatment of latent TB. In screening the risk population for TB, patients with renal failure acquiring long-term dialysis, in addition to close contacts, have higher incidence and mortality than general population. Moreover, the risk for active TB in dialysis patients is ten to 25 times larger. In Taiwan, the dialysis group is important because it has higher prevalence (2228 per in per million people by 2009 annual report of United States Renal Data System) than other countries in the world. In particular, the dialysis patients usually has an extrapulmonary presentation for their TB, so diagnosis is always delay. Hence, we should detect latent TB in those dialysis patients for monitor them from active tuberculosis.

Currently, interferon-gamma release assays (IGRAs) are used for finding out those with latent TB and have been proven useful for those being immunocompromised, and having BCG vaccination. For dialysis patients, IGRAs have been tested and been considered better than skin tuberculin test. However, previous studied rarely observed the patients receiving peritoneal dialysis. Besides, those cross-sectional studies used the indirect evidence for diagnosis and lacked longitudinal follow-up. We thus conducted this study for observing the prevalence of latent TB in those receiving hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis by using IGRAs. We also kept one-year follow-up for the primary outcome of active TB occurrence.

Enrollment

234 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • age equal to or more than 18-years old
  • having received dialysis more than 3 months

Exclusion criteria

  • Positive HIV test
  • Liver cirrhosis, Child-Pugh class C
  • Receiving long-term systemic corticosteroid use
  • Receiving chemotherapy within recent three months
  • Life span is less than one year
  • Being suspected to have active tuberculosis

Trial design

234 participants in 2 patient groups

IGRA-positive group
Description:
The subjects who have positive results of interferon-gamma release assay
IGRA-negative group
Description:
The subjects who have negative results of interferon-gamma release assay

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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