TB Research

Clinical testing of drug treatment shortening in patients with TB using PET/CT imaging of lung lesions

Stephanus T. Malherbe, Ray Chen, Xiang Yu, Bronwyn Smith, Xin Liu, Jingcai Gao, Andreas H. Diacon, R Dawson, et al. (55 authors)

Science Translational Medicine · 2026-01

Abstract

Six months of drug treatment is standard of care for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). Understanding the factors determining the length of treatment required for durable cure would allow individualization of treatment durations. We conducted a prospective, randomized, controlled noninferiority trial (PredictTB) of 4 versus 6 months of chemotherapy in patients with pulmonary TB in South Africa and China. Seven hundred and four participants with newly diagnosed, drug-sensitive TB were enrolled and stratified on the basis of radiographic disease characteristics assessed by FDG PET/CT imaging. Participants with less extensive disease ( n = 273) were randomly assigned at week 16 to complete therapy after 4 months or continue receiving treatment for 6 months. This study was stopped early after an interim analysis revealed that patients assigned to the 4-month treatment arm had a higher risk of relapse. Among participants who received 4 months of chemotherapy, 17 of 141 (12.1%) experienced TB-specific unfavorable outcomes compared with only 2 of 132 (1.5%) who completed 6 months of treatment. In the nonrandomized arm that included participants with more extensive disease, only 8 of 248 (3.2%) experienced unfavorable outcomes. Total lung cavity volume and lesion glycolysis at week 16 were associated with the risk of unfavorable outcomes. PET/CT imaging at TB recurrence showed that bacteriological relapses predominantly occurred in active cavities originally present at baseline. Subsequent post hoc automated segmentation of serial PET/CT scans combined with machine learning enabled the classification of participants according to their likelihood of relapse.

MeSH terms

  • Medicine
  • Lung
  • Tuberculosis
  • Lesion
  • Surgery
  • Disease
  • Internal medicine
  • Clinical trial
  • Chemotherapy
  • Interim analysis
  • Drug treatment
  • Radiography
  • Radiology
  • Lung disease
  • Progressive disease
  • Interim