Levofloxacin versus placebo for the prevention of tuberculosis disease in child contacts of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: study protocol for a phase III cluster randomised controlled trial (TB-CHAMP)
Seddon JA, Garcia-Prats AJ, Purchase SE, Osman M, Demers AM, Hoddinott G, Crook AM, Owen-Powell E, et al. (15 authors)
Trials · 2018-12
Abstract
Background Multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB) presents a challenge for global TB control. Treating individuals with MDR-TB infection to prevent progression to disease could be an effective public health strategy. Young children are at high risk of developing TB disease following infection and are commonly infected by an adult in their household. Identifying young children with household exposure to MDR-TB and providing them with MDR-TB preventive therapy could reduce the risk of disease progression. To date, no trials of MDR-TB preventive therapy have been completed and World Health Organization guidelines suggest close observation with no active treatment. Methods The tuberculosis child multidrug-resistant preventive therapy (TB-CHAMP) trial is a phase III cluster randomised placebo-controlled trial to assess the efficacy of levofloxacin in young child contacts of MDR-TB cases. The trial is taking place at three sites in South Africa where adults with MDR-TB are identified. If a child aged Discussion If the TB-CHAMP trial demonstrates that levofloxacin is effective in preventing TB disease in young children who have been exposed to MDR-TB and that it is safe, well tolerated, acceptable and cost-effective, we would expect that that this intervention would rapidly transfer into policy. Trial registration ISRCTN Registry, ISRCTN92634082 . Registered on 31 March 2016.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
- Antitubercular Agents
- Treatment Outcome
- Drug Administration Schedule
- Contact Tracing
- Housing
- Age Factors
- Time Factors
- Child, Preschool
- Infant
- Cost-Benefit Analysis
- Drug Costs
- South Africa
- Female
- Male
- Multicenter Studies as Topic
- Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
- Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic
- Levofloxacin