Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
1472 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2010-10-31
2012-07-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Diagnostic tools introduced 100 years ago are still in routine use and increasingly inaccurate if the face of the HIV and TB syndemics. Consequently, many patients with active TB remain undiagnosed and continue to spread the disease within the community. Thus, missed or delayed diagnosis results in ongoing transmission, patient morbidity and mortality, and social and economic consequences. Currently, there is no available point-of-care, or even point-of-treatment test that allows early detection of active tuberculosis at the peripheral health clinic level. Lack of rapid, simple and accurate diagnostic tests at this level is a major hurdle in controlling the global burden of TB. A number of promising new TB diagnostics have shown initial promise but there remains an urgent need to assess their impact when used at the point-of-treatment in primary care level.
In 2009, Cepheid released the Xpert® MTB/RIF Assay, which is the only system able to deliver answers directly from unprocessed samples by combining on-board preparation of the sample with real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in less than 2 hours. Additionally, the Xpert® MTB/RIF Assay allows for simultaneous on-demand molecular testing for the detection of mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) and rifampicin (frontline anti-TB drug) resistance. . The GeneXpert™ system consists of a GeneXpert instrument, personal computer and disposable fluidic cartridges. The system combines cartridge-based sample preparation with amplification and detection in a fully integrated and automated nucleic acid analysis instrument. Xpert has now been shown to be an accurate tool for the rapid diagnosis of tuberculosis in both smear-positive and smear-negative samples in both a multicentre evaluation and demonstration study with a sensitivity of approximately 70% in smear negative culture positive TB. Xpert testing in both these studies was performed at microscopy laboratories. In December 2010, on the basis of these results, Xpert was endorsed for TB diagnosis by the World Health Organisation (WHO) but is yet to be integrated into national tuberculosis control programmes.
Limited data is available on the impacts of Xpert on patient important outcomes such as TB-related morbidity. No data is available about the feasibility and robustness of performing Xpert in primary care clinics at the POT using minimally trained nursing staff. The objective of this study will be to examine the feasibility and impact of a single point-of-treatment Gene Xpert MTB/RIF Assay performed by clinic staff compared to standard microscopy-centre based diagnostics. Special focus will be on the patient-related outcomes of time-to-treatment initiation, drop out rates and the mean difference in TB-morbidity scores in patients diagnosed with Xpert.
The Xpert POT study will be a multicentre patient-level randomised controlled trial comparing a single sputum GeneXpert MTB/RIF Assay performed at point-of-treatment with same-day standard fluorescent smear microscopy for TB diagnosis at the primary level of care. A single liquid MGIT culture performed a regional laboratory will be used as the reference standard.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
FACTORIAL
DIAGNOSTIC
NONE
Study Groups
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Xpert MTB/RIF
Patients in this arm will receive 1 sputum Xpert MTB/RIF test (point-of-treatment) and 1 sputum sample for MGIT liquid TB culture (regional lab)
Xpert MTB/RIF assay
Automated nucleic-acid amplification test (fully integrated) test for TB
Sputum smear microscopy
Patients in this study arm will receive 2 sputum samples for same-day smear microscopy and 1 of the sputum samples will have a MGIT Liquid culture (regional lab).
Smear microscopy
Smear microscopy involve sputum smear with either ziehl-neelsen or auramine-O staining of slides and light or fluorescence microscopy reading
Interventions
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Xpert MTB/RIF assay
Automated nucleic-acid amplification test (fully integrated) test for TB
Smear microscopy
Smear microscopy involve sputum smear with either ziehl-neelsen or auramine-O staining of slides and light or fluorescence microscopy reading
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Ambulant patient presenting to TB clinic
IF HIV negative requires 2 or more of the following:
* Cough ≥ 2 weeks
* loss of weight
* persistent fever ≥ 2 weeks and/or
* a single recorded temp \> 38°C
* night sweats
* generalized fatigue
* hemoptysis or
* chest pain
OR if HIV positive - any one of the following:
* current cough
* night sweats
* fever
* loss of weight
3. Patient 18 years or above
Exclusion Criteria
2. Unable to produce 2 sputa of ≥ 1ml
3. TB treatment within the last 60 days
4. Unable to potentially return for study follow-up at 2 and 6 months (i.e. leaving community)
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Biomedical Research and Training Institute
OTHER
University of Zimbabwe
OTHER
University of Zambia
OTHER
Medical Research Council, South Africa
OTHER
Mbeya medical research program
UNKNOWN
McGill University
OTHER
Radboud University Medical Center
OTHER
University of Cape Town Lung Institute
OTHER
University of Cape Town
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Keertan Dheda
Professor and Head, Lung Infection and Immunity unit
Principal Investigators
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Keertan Dheda, MD PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Cape Town
Locations
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Medical Research Council
Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
University of Cape Town
Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
University Teaching Hospital of Zambia
Lusaka, , Zambia
University of Zimbabwe
Harare, , Zimbabwe
Countries
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References
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Theron G, Zijenah L, Chanda D, Clowes P, Rachow A, Lesosky M, Bara W, Mungofa S, Pai M, Hoelscher M, Dowdy D, Pym A, Mwaba P, Mason P, Peter J, Dheda K; TB-NEAT team. Feasibility, accuracy, and clinical effect of point-of-care Xpert MTB/RIF testing for tuberculosis in primary-care settings in Africa: a multicentre, randomised, controlled trial. Lancet. 2014 Feb 1;383(9915):424-35. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62073-5. Epub 2013 Oct 28.
Other Identifiers
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IP.09.32040.009
Identifier Type: OTHER_GRANT
Identifier Source: secondary_id
TBNEATXpertRCT
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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