Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Not yet recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
Tuberculosis
Design
Observational Model: CohortTime Perspective: Prospective

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 12 years and 60 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Although the estimated numbers of people infected with TB in Africa are declining since the rollout of antiretroviral therapy a decade ago, TB is still the highest in the world. Early diagnosis and treatment of TB disease are essential to reducing morbidity and mortality. Transformative progress wil...

Although the estimated numbers of people infected with TB in Africa are declining since the rollout of antiretroviral therapy a decade ago, TB is still the highest in the world. Early diagnosis and treatment of TB disease are essential to reducing morbidity and mortality. Transformative progress will never be possible with the current diagnostic tools as they rely on the detection of active TB which usually happen after disease has already been spread to others. Diagnostic technologies to accurately detect who will develop active TB are under development. However, their performance is not well reported. A better TB prediction test is needed to detect TB before clinical manifestation. The PreFIT investigators hypothesize that volunteers with a combination of positive Xpert HR result, high CRP, and/or low Hb levels will likely progress to active TB within 12 months. They also hypothesize that those with TB will have early high Hepcidin, Ferritin and Transferrin levels. The investigators plan to ask those found with TB at the local clinic if they accept to join the study. The participants, if they consent will then give information about people (contacts) who they stay with or meet frequently to also join the study. Contacts who have TB symptoms will be asked to cough sputum to be tested for co-prevalent TB disease. If they are found not to have TB disease, they will be asked to give blood: few drops from a finger prick and about 50mls from the vein on the arm to be stored and used for further tests. Follow-up and sampling of enrolled contacts without co-prevalent active TB will occur at six and 12 months (± 21 days before or after each time point, a six-week total window). Participants meeting presumptive TB or sputum expectorator definitions at six (M6) or 12 months (M12) of follow-up, or report with symptoms at any timepoint in-between, will undergo Xpert Ultra (or Xpert MTB/RIF if Ultra unavailable) and culture testing. All positive cultures will undergo whole genome sequencing (WGS) to track index case and co-prevalent or incident case transmission. Chest X-ray (CXR) will be done at M12 to potentially rule-out active disease missed by microbiological methods. Passive TB diagnoses (microbiological or empirical) throughout the follow-up period will be captured. To prevent diagnostic information bias, M0 and M6 test results for Xpert HR, CRP and haemoglobin will be kept concealed to the study nurse(s) and physician(s) who screen the cohort participants for active TB during follow-up. Similarly, laboratory technicians who test the stored samples for hepcidin, transferrin and ferritin will be blinded to whether the sample is from a participant who developed active TB during follow-up, or from a cohort participant who did not. The study will recruit 1515 trial participants each at Stellenbosch University in South Africa, 1515 at Centro de Investigação em Saúde de Manhiça in Mozambique and 1010 at Makerere University in Uganda. Participants will be between the ages of 12 and 60 years; pregnant women, minorities, economic and education disadvantaged, both HIV negative and positive will join the study. Contacts found to have co-prevalent active TB, potential pathologies on CXR, abnormal Hb and CRP levels will be referred to the local clinic for investigation per standard-of-care with a written summary of the relevant study results. All participant information will be treated in a strictly confidential manner and will be identified only by a code and not by any personal identifier. PreFIT's results will contribute to the development and uptake of accurate, cost-effective, scalable and field-friendly diagnostic tools, to facilitate scale-up of preventive treatment in sub-Saharan Africa and beyond.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04825327
Collaborators
  • University of Stellenbosch
  • Makerere University
  • Centro de Investigacao em Saude de Manhica
  • Barcelona Institute for Global Health
  • Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics, Switzerland
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Grant Theron, PhD University of Stellenbosch Study Director: Alberto L Garcia-Basteiro, PhD Barcelona Institute for Global Health Study Director: Adam Penn-Nicholson, PhD The Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics