Winner of the 2011 APEX Award for Publication Excellence follow @IntMedNews
RSS Feeds
Find Us on Facebook

Infectious Diseases

Shorter Combo Therapy Effective for Latent TB

By: SUSAN LONDON, Hospitalist News Digital Network

DENVER – Shorter combination therapy was at least as efficacious as conventional longer monotherapy for preventing tuberculosis in patients with latent infection, according to final results of the phase III PREVENT TB trial.

The trial, also known as TB Trials Consortium Study 26, was conducted among more than 8,000 patients with latent TB infection who were at high risk for progression.


Dr. Timothy R. Sterling

 

    

After 33 months, the cumulative rate of TB disease was 0.19% in the group given 3 months of weekly rifapentine plus isoniazid under direct observation (3HP), compared with 0.43% in the group given 9 months of daily isoniazid on a self-administered basis (9H).

The difference between groups was well within the trial’s boundary set for noninferiority, lead investigator Dr. Timothy R. Sterling reported at an international conference of the American Thoracic Society.

In addition, although patients in the group given the shorter combination therapy were more likely to stop treatment specifically because of adverse events, they were still far more likely to complete treatment.

Taken together, the trial’s findings suggest that "3HP is an alternative to 9H for treatment of latent [TB] infection in persons at high risk for progression to tuberculosis," he said.

"3HP was as effective as 9H in this clinical trial, but in operational settings, 3HP could be more effective than 9H, particularly if 3HP is given under direct observation and 9H has completion rates of approximately 30%-60%," Dr. Sterling further noted. "And, with greater effectiveness, there would be more tuberculosis prevented."

The trial enrolled 8,053 patients older than 2 years of age from the United States, Canada, Brazil, and Spain who had a positive tuberculin skin test (or alternately, in the case of young children, close contact with someone with TB), plus factors putting them at high risk for progression.

The patients were randomly assigned in nearly equal numbers to two groups treated on an open-label basis.

The 3HP group was given once-weekly, directly observed treatment with rifapentine (brand name Priftin; 900 mg) plus isoniazid (brand name Nydrazid, also known as isonicotinic acid hydrazide or INH; 15-25 mg/kg) for 3 months. The 9H group was given daily self-administered isoniazid (5-15 mg/kg) for 9 months.

All patients also received vitamin B6. They were followed up for 33 months from the time of enrollment.

The patients had a median age of 37 years and 58% were white, reported Dr. Sterling, who is a professor of medicine and director of epidemiology research in the division of infectious diseases at the Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health in Nashville, Tenn. Overall, 3% were HIV positive.

In modified intention-to-treat analyses, the cumulative rate of culture-confirmed TB was 0.19% in the rifapentine plus isoniazid group, compared with 0.43% in the isoniazid-only group. The upper bound of the 95% confidence interval for the difference between these rates was 0.01% – far below the trial’s predefined noninferiority margin of 0.75%.

05/16/11  

FROM AN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE AMERICAN THORACIC SOCIETY

Bookmark and Share


Submitting your vote...
Not rated yet. Be the first who rates this item!
Click the rating bar to rate this item.

Vitals

Major Finding: Compared with their counterparts given longer therapy with isoniazid, patients given shorter therapy with rifapentine plus isoniazid were less likely to develop culture-confirmed tuberculosis (0.19% vs. 0.43%).

Data Source: A randomized, open-label, noninferiority phase III trial among 8,053 individuals with latent tuberculosis infection who were at high risk for progression to tuberculosis disease.

Disclosures: Dr. Sterling reported that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. Sanofi-Aventis provided rifapentine for the trial.

I would like to receive The IMpulse E-Newsletter each week.


Specialty Focus
Sponsored by


calendar
May 18 - 23
San Francisco, CA
American Thoracic Society (ATS): International Conference
May 19 - 22
New York, NY
American Society of Hypertension (ASH): Annual Scientific Meeting
May 19 - 22
San Diego, CA
Digestive Disease Week (DDW 2012)
May 19 - 22
Sao Paulo,
XXX RADLA 2012: Annual Meeting of Latin American Dermatologists
May 19 - 24
Atlanta, GA
American Urological Association (AUA): Annual Meeting
May 19 - 23
Stockholm,
European Calcified Tissue Society (ECTS): Annual Congress
May 20 - 23
Brisbane,
Australasian College of Dermatologists: Annual Scientific Meeting
May 20 - 23
San Antonio, TX
American Pediatric Surgical Association (APSA): Annual Meeting
May 20 - 23
Washington, DC
American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP): Leadership & Advocacy Conference
May 21 - 23
Nice,
12th International Review of Bipolar Disorders (IRBD 12)
More Calendar »