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High-dose rifapentine with or without moxifloxacin for shortening treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis: Study protocol for TBTC study 31/ACTG A5349 phase 3 clinical trial

Authors :
William J. Burman
Kelly E. Dooley
Pei-Jean Feng
Michael Chen
Melissa Engle
Stefan V. Goldberg
John L. Johnson
Mark F. Cotton
Nguyen Viet Nhung
Kwok-Chiu Chang
Kathleen Robergeau
Andrew Vernon
Lorna Bozeman
José M. Miró
Courtney V. Fletcher
Ekaterina V. Kurbatova
Anne E. Purfield
April C. Pettit
Patrick P. J. Phillips
Erin Sizemore
Marc H Weiner
Richard E. Chaisson
Erica Lessem
Susan Swindells
Nigel A. Scott
Anthony T. Podany
Susan E. Dorman
Wadzanai Samaneka
Phan Ha
Beverly Metchock
Payam Nahid
Charles M. Heilig
Source :
Contemp Clin Trials
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Introduction Phase 2 clinical trials of tuberculosis treatment have shown that once-daily regimens in which rifampin is replaced by high dose rifapentine have potent antimicrobial activity that may be sufficient to shorten overall treatment duration. Herein we describe the design of an ongoing phase 3 clinical trial testing the hypothesis that once-daily regimens containing high dose rifapentine in combination with other anti-tuberculosis drugs administered for four months can achieve cure rates not worse than the conventional six-month treatment regimen. Methods/Design S31/A5349 is a multicenter randomized controlled phase 3 non-inferiority trial that compares two four-month regimens with the standard six-month regimen for treating drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis in HIV-negative and HIV-positive patients. Both of the four-month regimens contain high-dose rifapentine instead of rifampin, with ethambutol replaced by moxifloxacin in one regimen. All drugs are administered seven days per week, and under direct observation at least five days per week. The primary outcome is tuberculosis disease-free survival at twelve months after study treatment assignment. A total of 2500 participants will be randomized; this gives 90% power to show non-inferiority with a 6.6% margin of non-inferiority. Discussion This phase 3 trial formally tests the hypothesis that augmentation of rifamycin exposures can shorten tuberculosis treatment to four months. Trial design and standardized implementation optimize the likelihood of obtaining valid results. Results of this trial may have important implications for clinical management of tuberculosis at both individual and programmatic levels. Trial registration: NCT02410772 . Registered 8 April 2015, https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02410772?term=02410772&rank=1

Details

ISSN :
15517144
Volume :
90
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Contemporary Clinical Trials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c6d0d59beba872c1af6cc8330255f07f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cct.2020.105938