India: ICMR to conduct clinical trials for evaluating TB drugs and vaccines
Aiming to reduce by 90 per cent the tuberculosis incidence and mortality by the year 2035 in the country, the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) will soon conduct clinical trials for evaluating tuberculosis drugs and vaccines.
In this regard, the apex research organization in the country
has now invited Letter of Interest (LOI) from government
hospitals, medical colleges, research institutions/organizations
and private hospitals and practitioners for conducting clinical
trials for evaluating tuberculosis drugs and vaccines.
The
list of proposed clinical trials included a phase-I, open label,
parallel group, pharmacokinetic and efficacy study of rifampicin
(450 mg and 600mg) and Piperine (225 mg) compared with standard
rifampicin therapy in newly diagnosed sputum positive pulmonary
tuberculosis patients as an adjuvant to the standard TB therapy;
a phase IIb open label randomized controlled clinical trial to
evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and
anti-bacterial activity of high dose rifampicin when given along
with other anti- TB drugs in adults with newly diagnosed
pulmonary tuberculosis; a double-blind, placebo-controlled
comparative study for safety and efficacy of Metformin HCL in
combination with ATT as adjunct therapy; a phase–III
multicentric open label randomized clinical trial to assess the
efficacy and safety of delamanid in combination with
bedaquiline, linezolid and clofazimine in participants with
XDR-TB; and inhibition of host-induced mycobacterial efflux
pumps as a novel strategy to counter drug tolerance and
virulence of pulmonary tuberculosis.
The list
also included a randomized controlled clinical trial on the
safety and efficacy of delamanid in the prevention of TB among
latent TB infected household contacts of multidrug resistant
pulmonary TB patients; early bactericidal activity (EBA) of
rifampicin and feropenem in DS –TB patients; salvage
regimen for XDR-TB; randomized, controlled, phase II study to
evaluate safety, immunogenicity and POD after vaccination in a
high risk group (IGRA positive subjects); and an open label
safety observational study of inhaled gaseous nitric oxide (gNO)
for adults with drug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis.
India
is a signatory to the WHO Global End TB Strategy, which was
approved by the World Health Assembly in May 2014. The strategy
calls for a 90 per cent reduction in TB incidence and mortality
by 2035 and an elimination of catastrophic health
expenditure.
It is evident now that such a reduction
cannot be achieved only with the existing tools &
strategies. There is a strong need to undertake active research
activities so as to identify newer ATT drug regimes, evaluate
new drugs, test TB vaccines and validate new diagnostics
tools. The research results should be able to guide cost
effective treatment guidelines for local needs and the TB
control programme.
Keeping in view the stringent
national and international guidelines for conduct of clinical
trials, ICMR has decided to initiate conduct of clinical trials
for regulatory submissions and for academic purposes.
Source:
PharmaBiz