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A pivotal registration phase III, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the Gatifloxacin for TB (OFLOTUB) project

BACKGROUND: There have been no major advances in tuberculosis (TB) drug development since the first East African/British Medical Research Council short course chemotherapy trial 35 years ago. Since then, the landscape for conducting TB clinical trials has profoundly changed with the emergence of HIV...

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Autores principales: Merle, Corinne SC, Sismanidis, Charalambos, Sow, Oumou Bah, Gninafon, Martin, Horton, John, Lapujade, Olivier, Lo, Mame Bocar, Mitchinson, Denis A, Perronne, Christian, Portaels, Francoise, Odhiambo, Joseph, Olliaro, Piero, Rustomjee, Roxana, Lienhardt, Christian, Fielding, Katherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3528451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22607233
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-13-61
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author Merle, Corinne SC
Sismanidis, Charalambos
Sow, Oumou Bah
Gninafon, Martin
Horton, John
Lapujade, Olivier
Lo, Mame Bocar
Mitchinson, Denis A
Perronne, Christian
Portaels, Francoise
Odhiambo, Joseph
Olliaro, Piero
Rustomjee, Roxana
Lienhardt, Christian
Fielding, Katherine
author_facet Merle, Corinne SC
Sismanidis, Charalambos
Sow, Oumou Bah
Gninafon, Martin
Horton, John
Lapujade, Olivier
Lo, Mame Bocar
Mitchinson, Denis A
Perronne, Christian
Portaels, Francoise
Odhiambo, Joseph
Olliaro, Piero
Rustomjee, Roxana
Lienhardt, Christian
Fielding, Katherine
author_sort Merle, Corinne SC
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: There have been no major advances in tuberculosis (TB) drug development since the first East African/British Medical Research Council short course chemotherapy trial 35 years ago. Since then, the landscape for conducting TB clinical trials has profoundly changed with the emergence of HIV infection, the spread of resistant TB bacilli strains, recent advances in mycobacteriological capacity, and drug discovery. As a consequence questions have arisen on the most appropriate approach to design and conduct current TB trials. To highlight key issues discussed: Is a superiority, equivalence, or non-inferiority design most appropriate? What should be the primary efficacy outcome? How to consider re-infections in the definition of the outcome? What is the optimal length of patient follow-up? Is blinding appropriate when treatment duration in test arm is shorter? What are the appropriate assumptions for sample size calculation? METHODS: Various drugs are currently in the development pipeline. We are presenting in this paper the design of the most recently completed phase III TB trial, the OFLOTUB project, which is the pivotal trial of a registration portfolio for a gatifloxacin-containing TB regimen. It is a randomized, open-label, multicenter, controlled trial aiming to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a gatifloxacin-containing 4-month regimen (trial registration: ClinicalTrial.gov database: NCT00216385). RESULTS: In the light of the recent scientific and regulatory discussions, we discuss some of the design issues in TB clinical trials and more specifically the reasons that guided our choices, in order to best answer the trial objectives, while at the same time satisfying regulatory authority requirements. CONCLUSION: When shortening TB treatment, we are advocating for a non-inferiority, non-blinded design, with a composite unfavorable endpoint assessed 12 months post treatment completion, and added trial procedures specifically aiming to: (1) minimize endpoint unavailability; and (2) distinguish between relapse and re-infection.
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spelling pubmed-35284512013-01-03 A pivotal registration phase III, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the Gatifloxacin for TB (OFLOTUB) project Merle, Corinne SC Sismanidis, Charalambos Sow, Oumou Bah Gninafon, Martin Horton, John Lapujade, Olivier Lo, Mame Bocar Mitchinson, Denis A Perronne, Christian Portaels, Francoise Odhiambo, Joseph Olliaro, Piero Rustomjee, Roxana Lienhardt, Christian Fielding, Katherine Trials Methodology BACKGROUND: There have been no major advances in tuberculosis (TB) drug development since the first East African/British Medical Research Council short course chemotherapy trial 35 years ago. Since then, the landscape for conducting TB clinical trials has profoundly changed with the emergence of HIV infection, the spread of resistant TB bacilli strains, recent advances in mycobacteriological capacity, and drug discovery. As a consequence questions have arisen on the most appropriate approach to design and conduct current TB trials. To highlight key issues discussed: Is a superiority, equivalence, or non-inferiority design most appropriate? What should be the primary efficacy outcome? How to consider re-infections in the definition of the outcome? What is the optimal length of patient follow-up? Is blinding appropriate when treatment duration in test arm is shorter? What are the appropriate assumptions for sample size calculation? METHODS: Various drugs are currently in the development pipeline. We are presenting in this paper the design of the most recently completed phase III TB trial, the OFLOTUB project, which is the pivotal trial of a registration portfolio for a gatifloxacin-containing TB regimen. It is a randomized, open-label, multicenter, controlled trial aiming to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a gatifloxacin-containing 4-month regimen (trial registration: ClinicalTrial.gov database: NCT00216385). RESULTS: In the light of the recent scientific and regulatory discussions, we discuss some of the design issues in TB clinical trials and more specifically the reasons that guided our choices, in order to best answer the trial objectives, while at the same time satisfying regulatory authority requirements. CONCLUSION: When shortening TB treatment, we are advocating for a non-inferiority, non-blinded design, with a composite unfavorable endpoint assessed 12 months post treatment completion, and added trial procedures specifically aiming to: (1) minimize endpoint unavailability; and (2) distinguish between relapse and re-infection. BioMed Central 2012-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3528451/ /pubmed/22607233 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-13-61 Text en Copyright ©2012 Merle et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology
Merle, Corinne SC
Sismanidis, Charalambos
Sow, Oumou Bah
Gninafon, Martin
Horton, John
Lapujade, Olivier
Lo, Mame Bocar
Mitchinson, Denis A
Perronne, Christian
Portaels, Francoise
Odhiambo, Joseph
Olliaro, Piero
Rustomjee, Roxana
Lienhardt, Christian
Fielding, Katherine
A pivotal registration phase III, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the Gatifloxacin for TB (OFLOTUB) project
title A pivotal registration phase III, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the Gatifloxacin for TB (OFLOTUB) project
title_full A pivotal registration phase III, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the Gatifloxacin for TB (OFLOTUB) project
title_fullStr A pivotal registration phase III, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the Gatifloxacin for TB (OFLOTUB) project
title_full_unstemmed A pivotal registration phase III, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the Gatifloxacin for TB (OFLOTUB) project
title_short A pivotal registration phase III, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the Gatifloxacin for TB (OFLOTUB) project
title_sort pivotal registration phase iii, multicenter, randomized tuberculosis controlled trial: design issues and lessons learnt from the gatifloxacin for tb (oflotub) project
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3528451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22607233
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-13-61
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