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  1. Article ; Online: Ulcerative pyoderma gangrenosum in inflammatory bowel disease.

    Motta, Ilaria / Perricone, Giovanni

    The lancet. Gastroenterology & hepatology

    2019  Volume 4, Issue 6, Page(s) 488

    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Colitis, Ulcerative/complications ; Colitis, Ulcerative/drug therapy ; Dermatologic Agents/therapeutic use ; Foot Ulcer/pathology ; Humans ; Infliximab/therapeutic use ; Male ; Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy ; Pyoderma Gangrenosum/etiology ; Pyoderma Gangrenosum/therapy
    Chemical Substances Dermatologic Agents ; Infliximab (B72HH48FLU)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-05-08
    Publishing country Netherlands
    Document type Case Reports ; Journal Article
    ISSN 2468-1253
    ISSN (online) 2468-1253
    DOI 10.1016/S2468-1253(19)30038-X
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics of anti-tubercular drugs: a tool for treatment optimization?

    Motta, Ilaria / Calcagno, Andrea / Bonora, Stefano

    Expert opinion on drug metabolism & toxicology

    2018  Volume 14, Issue 1, Page(s) 59–82

    Abstract: Introduction: WHO global strategy is to end tuberculosis epidemic by 2035. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic studies are increasingly performed and might confirm their potential role in optimizing treatment outcome in specific settings and populations. ...

    Abstract Introduction: WHO global strategy is to end tuberculosis epidemic by 2035. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic studies are increasingly performed and might confirm their potential role in optimizing treatment outcome in specific settings and populations. Insufficient drug exposure seems to be a relevant factor in tuberculosis outcome and for the risk of phenotypic resistance. Areas covered: This review discusses available pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic data of first and second-line antitubercular agents in relation to efficacy and toxicity. Pharmacodynamic implications of optimized drugs and new options regimens are reviewed. Moreover a specific session describes innovative investigations on drug penetration. Expert opinion: The optimal use of available antitubercular drugs is paramount for tuberculosis control and eradication. Whilst trials are still on-going, higher rifampicin doses should be reserved to treatment for tubercular meningitis. Therapeutic Drug Monitoring with limiting sampling strategies is advised in patients at risk of failure or with slow treatment response. Further studies are needed in order to provide definitive recommendations of pharmacogenetic-based individualization: however lower isoniazid doses in NAT2 slow acetylators and higher rifampicin doses in individuals with SLCO1B1 loss of function genes are promising strategies. Finally in order to inform tailored strategies we need more data on tissue drug penetration and pharmacological modelling.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Antitubercular Agents/administration & dosage ; Antitubercular Agents/adverse effects ; Antitubercular Agents/pharmacokinetics ; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ; Drug Monitoring/methods ; Drug Resistance, Bacterial ; Humans ; Isoniazid/administration & dosage ; Isoniazid/pharmacokinetics ; Models, Biological ; Pharmacogenetics ; Rifampin/administration & dosage ; Rifampin/pharmacokinetics ; Tuberculosis/drug therapy ; Tuberculosis/genetics
    Chemical Substances Antitubercular Agents ; Isoniazid (V83O1VOZ8L) ; Rifampin (VJT6J7R4TR)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-01
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2214462-6
    ISSN 1744-7607 ; 1742-5255
    ISSN (online) 1744-7607
    ISSN 1742-5255
    DOI 10.1080/17425255.2018.1416093
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  3. Article ; Online: Cost-effectiveness of short, oral treatment regimens for rifampicin resistant tuberculosis.

    Sweeney, Sedona / Berry, Catherine / Kazounis, Emil / Motta, Ilaria / Vassall, Anna / Dodd, Matthew / Fielding, Katherine / Nyang'wa, Bern-Thomas

    PLOS global public health

    2022  Volume 2, Issue 12, Page(s) e0001337

    Abstract: Current options for treating tuberculosis (TB) that is resistant to rifampicin (RR-TB) are few, and regimens are often long and poorly tolerated. Following recent evidence from the TB-PRACTECAL trial countries are considering programmatic uptake of 6- ... ...

    Abstract Current options for treating tuberculosis (TB) that is resistant to rifampicin (RR-TB) are few, and regimens are often long and poorly tolerated. Following recent evidence from the TB-PRACTECAL trial countries are considering programmatic uptake of 6-month, all-oral treatment regimens. We used a Markov model to estimate the incremental cost-effectiveness of three regimens containing bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid (BPaL) with and without moxifloxacin (BPaLM) or clofazimine (BPaLC) compared with the current mix of long and short standard of care (SOC) regimens to treat RR-TB from the provider perspective in India, Georgia, Philippines, and South Africa. We estimated total costs (2019 USD) and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) over a 20-year time horizon. Costs and DALYs were discounted at 3% in the base case. Parameter uncertainty was tested with univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analysis. We found that all three regimens would improve health outcomes and reduce costs compared with the current programmatic mix of long and short SOC regimens in all four countries. BPaL was the most cost-saving regimen in all countries, saving $112-$1,173 per person. BPaLM was the preferred regimen at a willingness to pay per DALY of 0.5 GDP per capita in all settings. Our findings indicate BPaL-based regimens are likely to be cost-saving and more effective than the current standard of care in a range of settings. Countries should consider programmatic uptake of BPaL-based regimens.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-12-07
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ISSN 2767-3375
    ISSN (online) 2767-3375
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pgph.0001337
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Population pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of investigational regimens' drugs in the TB-PRACTECAL clinical trial (the PRACTECAL-PKPD study): a prospective nested study protocol in a randomised controlled trial.

    Nyang'wa, Bern-Thomas / Kloprogge, Frank / Moore, David A J / Bustinduy, Amaya / Motta, Ilaria / Berry, Catherine / Davies, Geraint R

    BMJ open

    2021  Volume 11, Issue 9, Page(s) e047185

    Abstract: Introduction: Drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health threat, with little over 50% of patients successfully treated. Novel regimens like the ones being studied in the TB-PRACTECAL trial are urgently needed. Understanding anti-TB drug ... ...

    Abstract Introduction: Drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health threat, with little over 50% of patients successfully treated. Novel regimens like the ones being studied in the TB-PRACTECAL trial are urgently needed. Understanding anti-TB drug exposures could explain the success or failure of these trial regimens. We aim to study the relationship between the patients' exposure to anti-TB drugs in TB-PRACTECAL investigational regimens and their treatment outcomes.
    Methods and analysis: Adults with multidrug-resistant TB randomised to investigational regimens in TB-PRACTECAL will be recruited to a nested pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PKPD) study. Venous blood samples will be collected at 0, 2 and 23 hours postdose on day 1 and 0, 6.5 and 23 hours postdose during week 8 to quantify drug concentrations in plasma. Trough samples will be collected during week 12, 16, 20 and 24 visits. Opportunistic samples will be collected during weeks 32 and 72. Drug concentrations will be quantified using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Sputum samples will be collected at baseline, monthly to week 24 and then every 2 months to week 108 for MICs and bacillary load quantification. Full blood count, urea and electrolytes, liver function tests, lipase, ECGs and ophthalmology examinations will be conducted at least monthly during treatment.PK and PKPD models will be developed for each drug with nonlinear mixed effects methods. Optimal dosing will be investigated using Monte-Carlo simulations.
    Ethics and dissemination: The study has been approved by the Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) Ethics Review Board, the LSHTM Ethics Committee, the Belarus RSPCPT ethics committee and PharmaEthics and the University of Witwatersrand Human Research ethics committee in South Africa. Written informed consent will be obtained from all participants. The study results will be shared with public health authorities, presented at scientific conferences and published in a peer-reviewed journal.
    Trial registration number: NCT04081077; Pre-results.
    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Antitubercular Agents/therapeutic use ; Drugs, Investigational ; Humans ; Microbial Sensitivity Tests ; Prospective Studies ; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant/drug therapy
    Chemical Substances Antitubercular Agents ; Drugs, Investigational
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-09-06
    Publishing country England
    Document type Clinical Trial Protocol ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2599832-8
    ISSN 2044-6055 ; 2044-6055
    ISSN (online) 2044-6055
    ISSN 2044-6055
    DOI 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-047185
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  5. Article ; Online: Short oral regimens for pulmonary rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (TB-PRACTECAL): an open-label, randomised, controlled, phase 2B-3, multi-arm, multicentre, non-inferiority trial.

    Nyang'wa, Bern-Thomas / Berry, Catherine / Kazounis, Emil / Motta, Ilaria / Parpieva, Nargiza / Tigay, Zinaida / Moodliar, Ronelle / Dodd, Matthew / Solodovnikova, Varvara / Liverko, Irina / Rajaram, Shakira / Rassool, Mohammed / McHugh, Timothy / Spigelman, Melvin / Moore, David A / Ritmeijer, Koert / du Cros, Philipp / Fielding, Katherine

    The Lancet. Respiratory medicine

    2023  Volume 12, Issue 2, Page(s) 117–128

    Abstract: Background: Around 500 000 people worldwide develop rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis each year. The proportion of successful treatment outcomes remains low and new treatments are needed. Following an interim analysis, we report the final safety and ... ...

    Abstract Background: Around 500 000 people worldwide develop rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis each year. The proportion of successful treatment outcomes remains low and new treatments are needed. Following an interim analysis, we report the final safety and efficacy outcomes of the TB-PRACTECAL trial, evaluating the safety and efficacy of oral regimens for the treatment of rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis.
    Methods: This open-label, randomised, controlled, multi-arm, multicentre, non-inferiority trial was conducted at seven hospital and community sites in Uzbekistan, Belarus, and South Africa, and enrolled participants aged 15 years and older with pulmonary rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. Participants were randomly assigned, in a 1:1:1:1 ratio using variable block randomisation and stratified by trial site, to receive 36-80 week standard care; 24-week oral bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid (BPaL); BPaL plus clofazimine (BPaLC); or BPaL plus moxifloxacin (BPaLM) in stage one of the trial, and in a 1:1 ratio to receive standard care or BPaLM in stage two of the trial, the results of which are described here. Laboratory staff and trial sponsors were masked to group assignment and outcomes were assessed by unmasked investigators. The primary outcome was the percentage of participants with a composite unfavourable outcome (treatment failure, death, treatment discontinuation, disease recurrence, or loss to follow-up) at 72 weeks after randomisation in the modified intention-to-treat population (all participants with rifampicin-resistant disease who received at least one dose of study medication) and the per-protocol population (a subset of the modified intention-to-treat population excluding participants who did not complete a protocol-adherent course of treatment (other than because of treatment failure or death) and those who discontinued treatment early because they violated at least one of the inclusion or exclusion criteria). Safety was measured in the safety population. The non-inferiority margin was 12%. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02589782, and is complete.
    Findings: Between Jan 16, 2017, and March 18, 2021, 680 patients were screened for eligibility, of whom 552 were enrolled and randomly assigned (152 to the standard care group, 151 to the BPaLM group, 126 to the BPaLC group, and 123 to the BPaL group). The standard care and BPaLM groups proceeded to stage two and are reported here, post-hoc analyses of the BPaLC and BPaL groups are also reported. 151 participants in the BPaLM group and 151 in the standard care group were included in the safety population, with 138 in the BPaLM group and 137 in the standard care group in the modified intention-to-treat population. In the modified intention-to-treat population, unfavourable outcomes were reported in 16 (12%) of 137 participants for whom outcome was assessable in the BPaLM group and 56 (41%) of 137 participants in the standard care group (risk difference -29·2 percentage points [96·6% CI -39·8 to -18·6]; non-inferiority and superiority p<0·0001). 34 (23%) of 151 participants receiving BPaLM had adverse events of grade 3 or higher or serious adverse events, compared with 72 (48%) of 151 participants receiving standard care (risk difference -25·2 percentage points [96·6% CI -36·4 to -13·9]). Five deaths were reported in the standard care group by week 72, of which one (COVID-19 pneumonia) was unrelated to treatment and four (acute pancreatitis, suicide, sudden death, and sudden cardiac death) were judged to be treatment-related.
    Interpretation: The 24-week, all-oral BPaLM regimen is safe and efficacious for the treatment of pulmonary rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis, and was added to the WHO guidance for treatment of this condition in 2022. These findings will be key to BPaLM becoming the preferred regimen for adolescents and adults with pulmonary rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis.
    Funding: Médecins Sans Frontières.
    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Adolescent ; Humans ; Rifampin ; Acute Disease ; Pancreatitis/drug therapy ; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant/drug therapy ; Moxifloxacin ; Linezolid/therapeutic use ; Nitroimidazoles
    Chemical Substances Rifampin (VJT6J7R4TR) ; Moxifloxacin (U188XYD42P) ; pretomanid ; Linezolid (ISQ9I6J12J) ; Nitroimidazoles
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-11-16
    Publishing country England
    Document type Randomized Controlled Trial ; Multicenter Study ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2686754-0
    ISSN 2213-2619 ; 2213-2600
    ISSN (online) 2213-2619
    ISSN 2213-2600
    DOI 10.1016/S2213-2600(23)00389-2
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  6. Article ; Online: The Safety and Tolerability of Linezolid in Novel Short-Course Regimens Containing Bedaquiline, Pretomanid, and Linezolid to Treat Rifampicin-Resistant Tuberculosis: An Individual Patient Data Meta-analysis.

    Hasan, Tasnim / Medcalf, Ellie / Nyang'wa, Bern-Thomas / Egizi, Erica / Berry, Catherine / Dodd, Matthew / Foraida, Salah / Gegia, Medea / Li, Mengchun / Mirzayev, Fuad / Morgan, Hannah / Motta, Ilaria / Nguyen, Linh / Schumacher, Samuel / Schlub, Tim / Fox, Greg

    Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America

    2023  Volume 78, Issue 3, Page(s) 730–741

    Abstract: Background: Effectiveness, safety, tolerability, and adherence are critical considerations in shifting to shorter tuberculosis (TB) regimens. Novel 6-month oral regimens that include bedaquiline (B), pretomanid (Pa), and linezolid (L), with or without a ...

    Abstract Background: Effectiveness, safety, tolerability, and adherence are critical considerations in shifting to shorter tuberculosis (TB) regimens. Novel 6-month oral regimens that include bedaquiline (B), pretomanid (Pa), and linezolid (L), with or without a fourth drug, have been shown to be as or more effective than the established longer regimens for the treatment of multidrug-resistant/rifampicin-resistant TB (MDR/RR-TB). We aimed to evaluate the safety and tolerability of linezolid in BPaL-containing regimens for the treatment of MDR/RR-TB among recently completed clinical trials.
    Methods: A review and meta-analysis was undertaken including published and unpublished data from clinical trials, conducted between 2010 and 2021, that evaluated regimens containing BPaL for the treatment of MDR/RR-TB. Individual patient data were obtained. For each BPaL-containing regimen, we evaluated the frequency and severity of treatment-related adverse events. The risk difference of adverse events for each regimen was calculated, in comparison to patients assigned to receiving the lowest cumulative exposure of linezolid.
    Results: Data from 3 clinical trials investigating 8 unique BPaL-containing regimens were included, comprising a total of 591 participants. Adverse events were more frequent in groups randomized to a higher cumulative linezolid dose. Among patients who were randomized to a daily dose of 1200 mg linezolid, 68 of 195 (35%) experienced a grade 3-4 adverse event versus 89 of 396 (22%) patients receiving BPaL-containing regimens containing 600 mg linezolid.
    Conclusions: Regimens containing BPaL were relatively well tolerated when they included a daily linezolid dose of 600 mg. These novel regimens promise to improve the tolerability of treatment for MDR/RR-TB.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Antitubercular Agents/adverse effects ; Diarylquinolines/therapeutic use ; Linezolid/adverse effects ; Nitroimidazoles ; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ; Rifampin/pharmacology ; Tuberculosis/drug therapy ; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant/drug therapy
    Chemical Substances Antitubercular Agents ; bedaquiline (78846I289Y) ; Diarylquinolines ; Linezolid (ISQ9I6J12J) ; Nitroimidazoles ; pretomanid ; Rifampin (VJT6J7R4TR)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-10-20
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Meta-Analysis ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Review
    ZDB-ID 1099781-7
    ISSN 1537-6591 ; 1058-4838
    ISSN (online) 1537-6591
    ISSN 1058-4838
    DOI 10.1093/cid/ciad653
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  7. Article ; Online: Recent advances in the treatment of tuberculosis.

    Motta, Ilaria / Boeree, Martin / Chesov, Dumitru / Dheda, Keertan / Günther, Gunar / Horsburgh, Charles Robert / Kherabi, Yousra / Lange, Christoph / Lienhardt, Christian / McIlleron, Helen M / Paton, Nicholas I / Stagg, Helen R / Thwaites, Guy / Udwadia, Zarir / Van Crevel, Reinout / Velásquez, Gustavo E / Wilkinson, Robert J / Guglielmetti, Lorenzo

    Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases

    2023  

    Abstract: Background: Tuberculosis (TB) is a global health challenge and one of the leading causes of death worldwide. In the last decade, the TB treatment landscape has dramatically changed. After long years of stagnation, new compounds entered the market ( ... ...

    Abstract Background: Tuberculosis (TB) is a global health challenge and one of the leading causes of death worldwide. In the last decade, the TB treatment landscape has dramatically changed. After long years of stagnation, new compounds entered the market (bedaquiline, delamanid, and pretomanid) and phase III clinical trials have shown promising results towards shortening duration of treatment for both drug-susceptible (Study 31/A5349, TRUNCATE-TB, and SHINE) and drug-resistant TB (STREAM, NiX-TB, ZeNix, and TB-PRACTECAL). Dose optimization of rifamycins and repurposed drugs has also brought hopes of further development of safe and effective regimens. Consequently, international and WHO clinical guidelines have been updated multiple times in the last years to keep pace with these advances.
    Objectives: This narrative review aims to summarize the state-of-the-art on treatment of drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB, as well as recent trial results and an overview of ongoing clinical trials.
    Sources: A non-systematic literature review was conducted in PubMed and MEDLINE, focusing on the treatment of TB. Ongoing clinical trials were listed according to the authors' knowledge and completed consulting clinicaltrials.gov and other publicly available websites (www.resisttb.org/clinical-trials-progress-report, www.newtbdrugs.org/pipeline/trials).
    Content: This review summarizes the recent, major changes in the landscape for drug-susceptible and drug-resistant treatment, with a specific focus on their potential impact on patient outcomes and programmatic TB management. Moreover, insights in host-directed therapies, and advances in pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenomics are discussed. A thorough outline of ongoing therapeutic clinical trials is presented, highlighting different approaches and goals in current TB clinical research.
    Implications: Future research should be directed to individualize regimens and protect these recent breakthroughs by preventing and identifying the selection of drug resistance and providing widespread, affordable, patient-centred access to new treatment options for all people affected by TB.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-07-22
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 1328418-6
    ISSN 1469-0691 ; 1470-9465 ; 1198-743X
    ISSN (online) 1469-0691
    ISSN 1470-9465 ; 1198-743X
    DOI 10.1016/j.cmi.2023.07.013
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  8. Article ; Online: The Effect of Rifampicin on Darunavir, Ritonavir, and Dolutegravir Exposure within Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells: a Dose Escalation Study.

    De Nicolò, Amedeo / Calcagno, Andrea / Motta, Ilaria / De Vivo, Elisa / D'Avolio, Antonio / Di Perri, Giovanni / Wiesner, Lubbe / Ebrahim, Isma-Eel / Maartens, Gary / Orrell, Catherine / McIlleron, Helen

    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy

    2022  Volume 66, Issue 6, Page(s) e0013622

    Abstract: Ritonavir-boosted darunavir (DRV/r) and dolutegravir (DTG) are affected by induction of metabolizing enzymes and efflux transporters caused by rifampicin (RIF). This complicates the treatment of people living with HIV (PLWH) diagnosed with tuberculosis. ... ...

    Abstract Ritonavir-boosted darunavir (DRV/r) and dolutegravir (DTG) are affected by induction of metabolizing enzymes and efflux transporters caused by rifampicin (RIF). This complicates the treatment of people living with HIV (PLWH) diagnosed with tuberculosis. Recent data showed that doubling DRV/r dose did not compensate for this effect, and hepatic safety was unsatisfactory. We aimed to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of DRV, ritonavir (RTV), and DTG in the presence and absence of RIF in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). PLWH were enrolled in a dose-escalation crossover study with 6 treatment periods of 7 days. Participants started with DRV/r 800/100 mg once daily (QD), RIF and DTG were added before the RTV dose was doubled, and then they received DRV/r 800/100 twice daily (BD) and then 1,600/200 QD or vice versa. Finally, RIF was withdrawn. Plasma and intra-PBMC drug concentrations were measured through validated liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) methods. Seventeen participants were enrolled but only 4 completed all study phases due to high incidence of liver toxicity. Intra-PBMC DRV trough serum concentration (
    MeSH term(s) Anti-HIV Agents/pharmacokinetics ; Chromatography, Liquid ; Cross-Over Studies ; Darunavir/pharmacokinetics ; HIV Infections/drug therapy ; HIV Protease Inhibitors/pharmacology ; Heterocyclic Compounds, 3-Ring ; Humans ; Leukocytes, Mononuclear ; Oxazines ; Piperazines ; Pyridones ; Rifampin/pharmacokinetics ; Rifampin/therapeutic use ; Ritonavir/pharmacology ; Tandem Mass Spectrometry
    Chemical Substances Anti-HIV Agents ; HIV Protease Inhibitors ; Heterocyclic Compounds, 3-Ring ; Oxazines ; Piperazines ; Pyridones ; dolutegravir (DKO1W9H7M1) ; Ritonavir (O3J8G9O825) ; Rifampin (VJT6J7R4TR) ; Darunavir (YO603Y8113)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-05-18
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Clinical Trial, Phase I ; Journal Article ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 217602-6
    ISSN 1098-6596 ; 0066-4804
    ISSN (online) 1098-6596
    ISSN 0066-4804
    DOI 10.1128/aac.00136-22
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  9. Article ; Online: TB-PRACTECAL: study protocol for a randomised, controlled, open-label, phase II-III trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of regimens containing bedaquiline and pretomanid for the treatment of adult patients with pulmonary multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.

    Berry, Catherine / du Cros, Philipp / Fielding, Katherine / Gajewski, Suzanne / Kazounis, Emil / McHugh, Timothy D / Merle, Corinne / Motta, Ilaria / Moore, David A J / Nyang'wa, Bern-Thomas

    Trials

    2022  Volume 23, Issue 1, Page(s) 484

    Abstract: Background: Globally rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis disease affects around 460,000 people each year. Currently recommended regimens are 9-24 months duration, have poor efficacy and carry significant toxicity. A shorter, less toxic and more ... ...

    Abstract Background: Globally rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis disease affects around 460,000 people each year. Currently recommended regimens are 9-24 months duration, have poor efficacy and carry significant toxicity. A shorter, less toxic and more efficacious regimen would improve outcomes for people with rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis.
    Methods: TB-PRACTECAL is an open-label, randomised, controlled, phase II/III non-inferiority trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of 24-week regimens containing bedaquiline and pretomanid to treat rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. Conducted in Uzbekistan, South Africa and Belarus, patients aged 15 and above with rifampicin-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis and requiring a new course of therapy were eligible for inclusion irrespective of HIV status. In the first stage, equivalent to a phase IIB trial, patients were randomly assigned one of four regimens, stratified by site. Investigational regimens include oral bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid. Additionally, two of the regimens also included moxifloxacin (arm 1) and clofazimine (arm 2) respectively. Treatment was administered under direct observation for 24 weeks in investigational arms and 36 to 96 weeks in the standard of care arm. The second stage of the study was equivalent to a phase III trial, investigating the safety and efficacy of the most promising regimen/s. The primary outcome was the percentage of unfavourable outcomes at 72 weeks post-randomisation. This was a composite of early treatment discontinuation, treatment failure, recurrence, lost-to-follow-up and death. The study is being conducted in accordance with ICH-GCP and full ethical approval was obtained from Médecins sans Frontières ethical review board, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine ethical review board as well as ERBs and regulatory authorities at each site.
    Discussion: TB-PRACTECAL is an ambitious trial using adaptive design to accelerate regimen assessment and bring novel treatments that are effective and safe to patients quicker. The trial took a patient-centred approach, adapting to best practice guidelines throughout recruitment. The implementation faced significant challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trial was terminated early for efficacy on the advice of the DSMB and will report on data collected up to the end of recruitment and, additionally, the planned final analysis at 72 weeks after the end of recruitment.
    Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02589782. Registered on 28 October 2015.
    MeSH term(s) Adolescent ; Adult ; Humans ; Young Adult ; Antibiotics, Antitubercular/pharmacology ; Antibiotics, Antitubercular/therapeutic use ; Antitubercular Agents/pharmacology ; Antitubercular Agents/therapeutic use ; Diarylquinolines/pharmacology ; Diarylquinolines/therapeutic use ; Linezolid/pharmacology ; Linezolid/therapeutic use ; Pandemics ; Rifampin/pharmacology ; Rifampin/therapeutic use ; Treatment Outcome ; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant/diagnosis ; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant/drug therapy ; Multicenter Studies as Topic ; Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic ; Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic
    Chemical Substances Antibiotics, Antitubercular ; Antitubercular Agents ; bedaquiline (78846I289Y) ; Diarylquinolines ; Linezolid (ISQ9I6J12J) ; pretomanid ; Rifampin (VJT6J7R4TR)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-06-13
    Publishing country England
    Document type Clinical Trial Protocol ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2040523-6
    ISSN 1745-6215 ; 1468-6694 ; 1745-6215
    ISSN (online) 1745-6215
    ISSN 1468-6694 ; 1745-6215
    DOI 10.1186/s13063-022-06331-8
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  10. Article: Tuberculosis transmission among children and adolescents in schools and other congregate settings: a systematic review.

    Schepisi, Monica Sañé / Motta, Ilaria / Dore, Simone / Costa, Cecilia / Sotgiu, Giovanni / Girardi, Enrico

    The new microbiologica

    2018  Volume 41, Issue 4, Page(s) 282–290

    Abstract: Children, especially those aged <5 years, and adolescents are at increased risk of progression to active TB disease when infected. Management of childhood TB outbreaks is crucial for TB elimination especially in low burden countries. We searched the ... ...

    Abstract Children, especially those aged <5 years, and adolescents are at increased risk of progression to active TB disease when infected. Management of childhood TB outbreaks is crucial for TB elimination especially in low burden countries. We searched the electronic databases MEDLINE-CINHAL-EMBASE up to July 2017 for primary studies reporting on TB incidents which involved teacher/child-caregiver, relative or students diagnosed with TB in a school/childcare setting or in other congregate settings attended by children and adolescents. Out of 10,481 citations, 74 studies, published mostly in low TB burden countries from 1950 to 2017, describing 128 incident investigations, were included. Overall 5025 (14.2%) LTBI and 811 (2.3%) TB cases were diagnosed among 35,331 screened individuals. Incidents occurred mainly in schools (89.1%) where index cases were more frequently students (63.3%) than teachers/caregivers; almost all of the incidents exposing children aged 2-5 were attributable to a teacher/caregiver index case. In 68 individual contact investigations the pooled proportions of TB and LTBI among those exposed were 0.03 (95%CI 0.02-0.04) and 0.15 (95%CI 0.13- 0.18). The overall risk of developing TB disease in school-congregate settings seems slightly lower than in high-income country household settings. Public health interventions targeting school-congregate settings may be critical to overall TB control and towards TB elimination in low-burden countries.
    MeSH term(s) Disease Outbreaks/statistics & numerical data ; Humans ; Risk Factors ; Students/statistics & numerical data ; Tuberculosis/epidemiology ; Tuberculosis/transmission
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-09-25
    Publishing country Italy
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Systematic Review
    ZDB-ID 756168-4
    ISSN 1121-7138 ; 0391-5352
    ISSN 1121-7138 ; 0391-5352
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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