50th Union World Conference on Lung Health: Prevention trial targets multidrug-resistant TB
HYDERABAD, INDIA – The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is investing $70 million in a phase III clinical trial assessing the use of tuberculosis treatments in preventing multidrug-resistant tuberculosis infection among high-risk individuals, including infected household contacts of MDR-TB patients and people living with HIV, institute officials announced here.
The trial will compare the effectiveness of using delamanid
– one of only three new MDR-TB drugs to be developed in
half a century – with isoniazid, the standard TB drug used
in treating latent TB infection, Dr. Peter Kim of the NIH
said.
Household contacts of people with active TB
disease are at increased risk of both latent infection and
active TB disease. In high tuberculosis prevalence settings,
child household contacts of TB patients are three to four times
more likely to develop latent infection and five times more
likely to develop active disease, while adults are two to three
times more likely to have latent infection and three times more
likely to have active disease, Dr. Rebecca Harris of the London
School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene presented here.
Household
contacts in low TB prevalence settings have higher risk than
those in low burden settings, she said.
Despite the
“palpable excitement here about prevention
advances,” Dr. Kim said, referring to this meeting’s
focus on TB prevention and the announcements made here about
advances in TB vaccine development and access to prevention
drugs, “We still don’t know what we can do to
prevent MDR-TB,” which infects nearly half a million
people every year globally.
An effective measure to
prevent becoming infected and sick with tuberculosis was not
available for Manasi Khade, whose father was treated for MDR-TB
in Mumbai, India – often referred to as the global
epicenter of TB drug resistance. She became infected with
extensively drug resistant TB at the age of 19.
Khade,
who spoke here of her experience surviving XDR-TB – the
most difficult-to-treat form of the disease – was one of
the lucky few in India who had access to bedaquiline through a
compassionate use program. Her father did not, and in the course
of treatment lost sight in one eye and the ability to walk, even
three years after being cured.
Researchers
hypothesize that “prophylactic treatment with delaminid
will prove better than isoniazid at reducing the likelihood that
at-risk household members of individuals with MDR-TB will
develop active TB disease,” NIH officials said.
The
Protecting Households on Exposure to Newly Diagnosed Index
Multidrug-Resistant TB Patients study – or PHOENIx MDR-TB
study – is enrolling 5,610 participants, including 2,158
adults being treated for MDR-TB and 3,452 members of their
households who are at high risk of developing active disease,
Kim said. High-risk individuals include those who have latent TB
infection, children under five, and those living with HIV or
have immunosuppression from other conditions. Household members
will be randomly assigned to receive either oral delamanid daily
for 26 weeks or oral isoniazid plus vitamin B6 daily for 26
weeks.
The study is being conducted at 27 sites in 12
countries, including Brazil, Haiti, India, Kenya, Peru, South
Africa and Thailand.
Delamanid’s manufacturer,
Otsuka Pharmaceutical, is donating the drug for the trial, Dr.
Kim said, raising questions from tuberculosis treatment
advocates on whether the company intends to reduce the $1,700
cost for a six-month supply.
Source:
Science Speaks