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Shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in African and Indian children
BACKGROUND: Two-thirds of children with tuberculosis have non-severe disease. METHOD: SHINE was an open-label treatment-shortening non-inferiority trial in children with non-severe, symptomatic, presumed drug-susceptible, smear-negative tuberculosis, in Uganda, Zambia, South Africa and India. Childr...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
2022
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7612496/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35263517 http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2104535 |
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author | Turkova, Anna Wills, Genevieve H Wobudeya, Eric Chabala, Chishala Palmer, Megan Kinikar, Aarti Hissar, Syed Choo, Louise Musoke, Philippa Mulenga, Veronica Mave, Vidya Joseph, Bency LeBeau, Kirsten Thomason, Margaret J Mboizi, Robert B Kapasa, Monica van der Zalm, Marieke Raichur, Priyanka Bhavani, Perumal Kannabiran McIlleron, Helen Demers, Anne-Marie Aarnouste, Rob Love-Koh, James Seddon, James A Welch, Steven B Graham, Stephen M Hesseling, Anneke Gibb, Diana M Crook, Angela M |
author_facet | Turkova, Anna Wills, Genevieve H Wobudeya, Eric Chabala, Chishala Palmer, Megan Kinikar, Aarti Hissar, Syed Choo, Louise Musoke, Philippa Mulenga, Veronica Mave, Vidya Joseph, Bency LeBeau, Kirsten Thomason, Margaret J Mboizi, Robert B Kapasa, Monica van der Zalm, Marieke Raichur, Priyanka Bhavani, Perumal Kannabiran McIlleron, Helen Demers, Anne-Marie Aarnouste, Rob Love-Koh, James Seddon, James A Welch, Steven B Graham, Stephen M Hesseling, Anneke Gibb, Diana M Crook, Angela M |
author_sort | Turkova, Anna |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Two-thirds of children with tuberculosis have non-severe disease. METHOD: SHINE was an open-label treatment-shortening non-inferiority trial in children with non-severe, symptomatic, presumed drug-susceptible, smear-negative tuberculosis, in Uganda, Zambia, South Africa and India. Children aged <16 years were randomised to 16- versus 24-week standard first-line anti-tuberculosis treatment using WHO-recommended paediatric fixed-dose-combinations and a non-inferiority margin of 6% was used. The primary efficacy outcome was a composite of treatment failure, anti-tuberculosis treatment changes/restarts, on-treatment loss-to-follow-up, TB recurrence or death by 72 weeks, excluding children not reaching 16 weeks follow-up (modified-intent-to-treat). Primary safety outcome was on-treatment grade ≥3 adverse events. RESULTS: 1204 children (602 in each group) were enrolled between July 2016 and July 2018; median age 3.5 years (range 2 months-15 years), 52% male, 11% HIV-infected, 14% bacteriologically-confirmed tuberculosis. Retention by 72 weeks and adherence to allocated anti-tuberculosis treatment were 95% and 94%, respectively. Sixteen (3%) versus 18 (3%) children reached the primary efficacy outcome in 16- versus 24-week arms respectively: unadjusted difference -0.4%, 95% CI (-2.2, 1.5). Non-inferiority of 16-weeks was consistent across intention-to-treat, per-protocol and key secondary analyses including when restricting analysis to the 958 (80%) children independently adjudicated to have tuberculosis at baseline. 95 (8%) children experienced grade ≥3 adverse events, including 17 adverse reactions (11 hepatic, all except three occurred within first 8 weeks, when treatment arms were the same). CONCLUSIONS: 4-months anti-tuberculosis treatment was non-inferior to 6 months for children treated for drug-susceptible non-severe smear-negative tuberculosis. (Supported by University College London; Trial Registration: ISRCTN 63579542) |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7612496 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2022 |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-76124962022-03-14 Shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in African and Indian children Turkova, Anna Wills, Genevieve H Wobudeya, Eric Chabala, Chishala Palmer, Megan Kinikar, Aarti Hissar, Syed Choo, Louise Musoke, Philippa Mulenga, Veronica Mave, Vidya Joseph, Bency LeBeau, Kirsten Thomason, Margaret J Mboizi, Robert B Kapasa, Monica van der Zalm, Marieke Raichur, Priyanka Bhavani, Perumal Kannabiran McIlleron, Helen Demers, Anne-Marie Aarnouste, Rob Love-Koh, James Seddon, James A Welch, Steven B Graham, Stephen M Hesseling, Anneke Gibb, Diana M Crook, Angela M N Engl J Med Article BACKGROUND: Two-thirds of children with tuberculosis have non-severe disease. METHOD: SHINE was an open-label treatment-shortening non-inferiority trial in children with non-severe, symptomatic, presumed drug-susceptible, smear-negative tuberculosis, in Uganda, Zambia, South Africa and India. Children aged <16 years were randomised to 16- versus 24-week standard first-line anti-tuberculosis treatment using WHO-recommended paediatric fixed-dose-combinations and a non-inferiority margin of 6% was used. The primary efficacy outcome was a composite of treatment failure, anti-tuberculosis treatment changes/restarts, on-treatment loss-to-follow-up, TB recurrence or death by 72 weeks, excluding children not reaching 16 weeks follow-up (modified-intent-to-treat). Primary safety outcome was on-treatment grade ≥3 adverse events. RESULTS: 1204 children (602 in each group) were enrolled between July 2016 and July 2018; median age 3.5 years (range 2 months-15 years), 52% male, 11% HIV-infected, 14% bacteriologically-confirmed tuberculosis. Retention by 72 weeks and adherence to allocated anti-tuberculosis treatment were 95% and 94%, respectively. Sixteen (3%) versus 18 (3%) children reached the primary efficacy outcome in 16- versus 24-week arms respectively: unadjusted difference -0.4%, 95% CI (-2.2, 1.5). Non-inferiority of 16-weeks was consistent across intention-to-treat, per-protocol and key secondary analyses including when restricting analysis to the 958 (80%) children independently adjudicated to have tuberculosis at baseline. 95 (8%) children experienced grade ≥3 adverse events, including 17 adverse reactions (11 hepatic, all except three occurred within first 8 weeks, when treatment arms were the same). CONCLUSIONS: 4-months anti-tuberculosis treatment was non-inferior to 6 months for children treated for drug-susceptible non-severe smear-negative tuberculosis. (Supported by University College London; Trial Registration: ISRCTN 63579542) 2022-03-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7612496/ /pubmed/35263517 http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2104535 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/This Author Accepted Manuscript is licensed for use under the CC-BY-ND license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/ |
spellingShingle | Article Turkova, Anna Wills, Genevieve H Wobudeya, Eric Chabala, Chishala Palmer, Megan Kinikar, Aarti Hissar, Syed Choo, Louise Musoke, Philippa Mulenga, Veronica Mave, Vidya Joseph, Bency LeBeau, Kirsten Thomason, Margaret J Mboizi, Robert B Kapasa, Monica van der Zalm, Marieke Raichur, Priyanka Bhavani, Perumal Kannabiran McIlleron, Helen Demers, Anne-Marie Aarnouste, Rob Love-Koh, James Seddon, James A Welch, Steven B Graham, Stephen M Hesseling, Anneke Gibb, Diana M Crook, Angela M Shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in African and Indian children |
title | Shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in African and Indian children |
title_full | Shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in African and Indian children |
title_fullStr | Shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in African and Indian children |
title_full_unstemmed | Shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in African and Indian children |
title_short | Shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in African and Indian children |
title_sort | shorter treatment for non-severe tuberculosis in african and indian children |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7612496/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35263517 http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2104535 |
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