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Intensified Tuberculosis Treatment to Reduce the Mortality of Patients With Tuberculous Meningitis

Recruiting
15 years of age
Both
Phase 3

Overview

INTENSE-TBM is randomized controlled, phase III, multicenter, 2 x 2 factorial plan superiority trial assessing the efficacity of two interventions to reduce mortality from tuberculous meningitis (TBM) in adolescents and adults with or without HIV-infection in sub-Saharan Africa:

  • Intensified TBM treatment with high-dose rifampicin and linezolid, compared to WHO standard TBM treatment.
  • Aspirin, compared to not receiving aspirin. The trial will be open-label for anti-TB treatment and placebo-controlled for aspirin treatment.

Description

Settings: Côte d'Ivoire, Madagascar, Uganda, South Africa.

Follow-up: Participants will be followed up for 40 weeks.

Sample size: 768 patients (192 in each arm).

Primary analysis: We will use a Cox proportional hazard ratio model to compare intensified TB treatment with WHO standard TB treatment, and aspirin with placebo, adjusting for the initial stratification variables (trial country, HIV status, British Medical Research Council |BMRC] severity grade). The primary analysis will be conducted in the intention to treat population.

Sub-studies:

  • The PK-PD sub-study will take place in the 4 participating countries, and involve 40 participants in total.
  • The Multi-Omics sub-study will only take place in South-Africa. It will involve 160 participants in this country.

Participants in each sub-study will sign a specific informed consent.

Eligibility

Inclusion criteria:

  1. Age ≥ 15 years
  2. TBM defined as "definite", "probable" or "possible"
  3. Signed Informed Consent
    • Definite TBM = at least one of the following criteria: acid-fast bacilli seen in CSF microscopy, positive CSF M. tuberculosis culture, or positive CSF M. tuberculosis commercial nucleic acid amplification test.
    • Probable TBM = total modified Marais score ≥12 when neuroimaging is available, or ≥10 when neuroimaging is not available (at least 2 points should come from CSF or cerebral imaging criteria).
    • Possible TBM = total modified Marais 6-11 when neuroimaging is available, or 6-9 when neuroimaging is not available.

Exclusion criteria:

  • > 5 days of TB treatment
  • Renal failure (eGFR<30 ml/min, CKD-EPI formula).
  • Neutrophil count < 0.6 x 109/L.
  • Hemoglobin concentration < 8 g/dL.
  • Total bilirubin > 2.6 times the Upper Limit of Normal
  • Platelet count < 50 x 109/L.
  • ALT > 5 times the Upper Limit of Normal.
  • Clinical evidence of liver failure or decompensated cirrhosis.
  • For women: more than 17 weeks pregnancy or breastfeeding.
  • For patients without decrease level of consciousness (Glasgow Coma Scale = 15): Peripheral neuropathy scoring Grade 3 or above on the Brief Peripheral Neuropathy Score (BPNS).
  • Documented M. tuberculosis resistance to rifampicin.
  • Positive gram-stain, bacterial culture or cryptococcal antigen in the Cerebral Spinal Fluid.
  • Evidence of active bleeding (hemoptysis, gastrointestinal bleeding, hematuria, intracranial bleeding).
  • Inability to collect Cerebral Spinal Fluid, except for patients with confirmed tuberculosis (by rapid molecular test or culture) from another biological sample and clinical and/or CT scan evidence of meningitis.
  • Major surgery within the last two weeks prior to inclusion.
  • Ongoing chronic aspirin treatment (eg for cardiovascular risk).
  • Current use of drugs contraindicated with study drugs and that cannot be safely stopped (see Appendix 1: Drugs contra-indicated with study drugs).
  • In available history from patients:
    • Evidence of past intracranial bleeding.
    • Evidence of past of peptic ulceration.
    • Evidence of recent (< 3 month) gastrointestinal bleeding.
    • Known hypersensitivity contraindicating the use of study drugs .
    • Evidence of porphyria.
    • Evidence of hyperuricemia or gout.
  • Any reason which at the discretion of the investigator would compromise safety and

    cooperation in the trial.

Study details

Tuberculous Meningitis

NCT04145258

ANRS, Emerging Infectious Diseases

29 January 2024

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