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Tuberculosis (TB) Aftermath

Johns Hopkins University logo

Johns Hopkins University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Tuberculosis (TB)

Treatments

Other: Home-based Active Case Finding (HACF)
Other: Telephonic Active Case Finding (TACF)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04333485
IRB00247239
1R01AI143748-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

TB Aftermath will compare effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and feasibility of two ACF strategies for detecting recurrent TB and provide evidence needed to implement and scale the preferred ACF strategy. The specific aims are:

Primary Aim 1: To conduct a non-inferiority randomized trial to measure the comparative effectiveness of two potentially implementable ACF strategies within India's National TB Elimination Program (NTEP), conducted by existing NTEP healthcare workers (HCWs): (i) home-based ACF (HACF) and (ii) telephonic ACF (TACF).

Primary Aim 2: To characterize implementation processes of the ACF strategies using the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework to inform future scale-up and sustainability.

Primary Aim 3: To model the impact and cost effectiveness of the ACF strategies evaluated in the trial, and of potential alternative strategies for the targeting and timing of those strategies.

Secondary Aim: To measure the association of the severity, chronicity and progression of post-TB lung impairment with recurrent TB disease.

Full description

Approximately 7% of all reported tuberculosis (TB) cases each year are recurrent, occurring among people who have had TB in the recent or distant past. TB recurrence is particularly common in India, which has the largest TB burden worldwide. Although patients recently treated for TB are at high risk of developing TB again, evidence around effective active case finding (ACF) strategies in this population is scarce. The investigators will conduct a hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation non-inferiority randomized trial to compare the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and feasibility of two ACF strategies among individuals who have completed TB treatment and the household contacts (HHCs).

The investigators will enroll 1076 adults (≥ 18 years) who have completed TB treatment at a public TB unit (TU) in Pune, India, along with the HHCs (averaging two per patient, n = 2152). Participants will undergo symptom-based ACF by existing healthcare workers (HCWs) at 6-month intervals and will be randomized to either home-based ACF (HACF) or telephonic ACF (TACF). Symptomatic participants will undergo microbiologic testing through the program. Asymptomatic HHCs will be referred for TB preventive treatment (TPT) per national guidelines. The primary outcome is rate per 100 person-years of people diagnosed with new or recurrent TB by study arm, within 12 months following treatment completion. The secondary outcome is proportion of HHCs < 6 years, by study arm, initiated on TPT after ruling out TB disease. Study staff will collect socio-demographic and clinical data to identify risk factors for TB recurrence and will measure post-TB lung impairment. In both arms, an 18-month "mop-up" visit will be conducted to ascertain outcomes. The investigators will use the RE-AIM framework to characterize implementation processes and explore acceptability through in-depth interviews with index patients, HHCs and HCWs (n = 100). Cost-effectiveness will be assessed by calculating the incremental cost per TB case detected within 12 months and projected for disability-adjusted life years averted based on modeled estimates of morbidity, mortality, and time with infectious TB.

This novel trial will guide India's scale-up of post-treatment ACF and provide an evidence base for designing strategies to detect recurrent and new TB in other high burden settings.

Enrollment

3,094 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 99 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Those who are registered at one of the study TB Units (TUs) in Pune district as treatment completed or cured (regardless of type of TB or duration of treatment).
  • Confirmed treatment completion or cure status by the referring medical officer of the study TU.
  • Date of treatment completion within 60 days of date of enrolment.
  • Ability and willingness of participant or legal guardian/representative to provide informed consent to participate in the home-based ACF (HACF) or telephonic ACF arm (TACF).

(NOTE: Illiterate participants or participants with cognitive disabilities may be enrolled based on local regulatory policies, with the appropriate provisions for informed consent.)

  • All household contacts of TB cases who are able and willing to provide informed consent to participate are eligible. Household contacts who are <18 years old are eligible for enrolment if a legal guardian/representative provides informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Completed anti-TB treatment at a private sector clinic or TU outside of the study (final visit not registered at one of the study TB units)
  • Actively on anti-TB treatment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Screening

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

3,094 participants in 2 patient groups

Home-based Active Case Finding (HACF)
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Other: Home-based Active Case Finding (HACF)
Telephonic Active Case Finding (TACF)
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Other: Telephonic Active Case Finding (TACF)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Madhusudan Barthwal, MD; Vidya Mave, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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