| Literature DB >> 30901331 |
Patrick P J Phillips1, Carole D Mitnick2, James D Neaton3, Payam Nahid1, Christian Lienhardt4, Andrew J Nunn5.
Abstract
In a Collection Review, Patrick Phillips and colleagues discuss developments in clinical trial design for the evaluation of TB therapeutics.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30901331 PMCID: PMC6430373 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002767
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Summary of WHO guidelines, policies, and statements on the treatment of DR-TB.
Guidelines for the treatment of DS-TB are not included because these have remained largely unchanged in this period. Key dates are also included from the case study of the STREAM trial, a trial comparing a 9- to 11-month regimen containing high-dose moxifloxacin and clofazimine with the 20- to 24-month WHO-recommended standard of care regimen for MDR-TB, which is discussed further in .
| Key event in STREAM trial | Date of publication or event | WHO document title |
|---|---|---|
| 1996 | Guidelines for the management of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis | |
| 2000 | Guidelines for establishing DOTS-Plus pilot projects for the management of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) | |
| 2006 | Guidelines for the programmatic management of drug-resistant tuberculosis | |
| 2008 | Guidelines for the programmatic management of drug-resistant tuberculosis. Emergency Update 2008 | |
| June, 2011 | Guidelines for the programmatic management of drug-resistant tuberculosis. 2011 update | |
| First participant enrolled in STREAM Stage 1 trial | July, 2012 | |
| June, 2013 | The use of bedaquiline in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: Interim policy guidance | |
| October, 2014 | The use of delamanid in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: Interim policy guidance | |
| Last participant enrolled in STREAM Stage 1 trial | June, 2015 | |
| First participant enrolled in STREAM Stage 2 trial | April, 2016 | |
| May, 2016 | WHO treatment guidelines for drug-resistant tuberculosis. 2016 update | |
| October, 2016 | WHO treatment guidelines for drug-resistant tuberculosis. 2016 update. October 2016 revision | |
| October, 2016 | The use of delamanid in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in children and adolescents: Interim policy guidance | |
| March, 2017 | Report of the Guideline Development Group Meeting on the use of bedaquiline in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. A review of available evidence (2016) | |
| Preliminary results from STREAM Stage 1 trial presented at 48th Union Conference on Lung Health | October, 2017 | |
| January, 2018 | WHO position statement on the use of delamanid for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis | |
| March, 2018 | WHO treatment guidelines for isoniazid-resistant tuberculosis: Supplement to the WHO treatment guidelines for drug-resistant tuberculosis | |
| April, 2018 | Position statement on the continued use of the shorter MDR-TB regimen following an expedited review of the STREAM Stage 1 preliminary results | |
| August, 2018 | Rapid Communication: Key changes to treatment of multidrug- and rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (MDR/RR-TB) | |
| Final results from STREAM Stage 1 trial presented at 49th Union Conference on Lung Health | October, 2018 | |
| December, 2018 | WHO treatment guidelines for multidrug- and rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. 2018 update. Pre-final text | |
| Expected early 2019 | WHO treatment guidelines for multidrug- and rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. Final text |
Abbreviations: DS-TB, drug-sensitive tuberculosis; MDR-TB, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; RR-TB, rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis; TB, tuberculosis; WHO, World Health Organization.
Controls used in DR-TB trials.
| Choice of control | Examples | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo, added to optimized background regimen | Delamanid phase II and III trials [ | Permits blinding of healthcare providers and participants, yielding unbiased estimates of the efficacy and safety of the individual drug. This design was used to inform regulatory approval of new drugs. | Yields little or no information on how to use the drug in a regimen, which is essential for programmatic implementation; effect of drug can be masked if background regimen is highly effective. |
| External control (historical or concurrent) | NiX-TB (NCT02333799), ZeNiX-TB (NCT03086486) | Smaller sample size and operational efficiencies due to absence of randomization and use of only one regimen. Considered the only option if there is no accepted standard of care. The justification for use of a historic control can only be used in the first successful trial in that patient population; subsequent trials could use the previous intervention as internal control. | Highly dependent on choice of external control, differences between patient populations and secular trends (with a historical control) affect interpretation of results. Challenging to quantify how much “supportive care” in the trial affected outcomes relative to control outside trial [ |
| Randomized comparison in DS-TB, parallel uncontrolled DR-TB cohort with same regimen | STAND (NCT02342886), SimpliciTB (NCT03338621) | Randomized comparison in DS-TB provides strong evidence for safety of regimen in TB patients and efficacy in DS-TB. The parallel DR-TB cohort informs whether results differ between the two TB patient populations. | Only appropriate for regimens that are targeted for both DS- and DR-TB. Extrapolation from DS-TB comparison to DR-TB population requires assumptions. |
| Local standard of care (varying by site) | STREAM Stage 1 [ | Better external validity because of randomization to genuine standard of care, operational efficiencies because sites use local standard for control arm participants. | Control regimen may differ by site and over time. This will increase variability in results and may need to be accounted for by increasing sample size. |
| Prescriptive regimen | NEXT (NCT02454205), STREAM Stage 2 [ | Better internal validity because of clear randomized comparison of two regimens. | Limited external validity since choice of control regimen may not reflect standard in many places. This would change if a standardized regimen is widely adopted; there are currently variations in how the short regimen is used (for example, choice of fluoroquinolone and bedaquiline in South Africa). |
Abbreviations: DR-TB, drug-resistant TB; DS-TB, drug-sensitive TB; TB, tuberculosis.