Shorter
Treatment More Effective for Latent TB
SUMMARY
Rifapentine plus isoniazid administered once-weekly for
3 months to treat latent tuberculosis worked better than
daily isoniazid for 9 months, with fewer premature treatment
discontinuations, researchers reported at the recent American
Thoracic Society meeting. |
Below
is an edited excerpt from a press release issued by the National
Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention
(NCHHSTP) describing the study and its results. Additional
research will be needed to determine if these findings also
apply to people with HIV and to individuals in high TB prevalence
countries.
Research
Offers Simpler, Effective Treatment
Option for Latent TB Infection
May
16, 2011 -- Results from one of the largest U.S. government
clinical trials on tuberculosis preventive therapy to date
suggest that treatment for latent tuberculosis (TB) infection
-- normally a difficult and lengthy regimen -- may soon be
easier than ever before in countries with low-to-medium incidence
of TB. The trial results showed that a supervised once-weekly
regimen of rifapentine and isoniazid taken for three months
was just as effective as the standard self-administered nine-month
daily regimen of isoniazid, and was completed by more participants.
The multi-country, CDC-sponsored trial tested the effectiveness
of this new preventive TB treatment regimen (using currently
available anti-TB drugs) among persons with latent TB infection
who are at high risk for progression to TB disease. The results
were presented today at the American Thoracic Society International
Conference in Denver by principal investigator Timothy Sterling,
MD, of Vanderbilt University.
"Although the standard regimen is very effective in treating
latent TB infection, ensuring that those who need treatment
both begin and complete the lengthy, cumbersome isoniazid
regimen is challenging," said CDC Director Thomas R.
Frieden, MD. "New, simpler ways to prevent TB disease
are urgently needed, and this breakthrough represents one
of the biggest developments in TB treatment in decades."
Latent TB infection occurs when a person has TB bacteria in
his or her body, but does not have symptoms and cannot transmit
the bacteria to others. However, if the bacteria become active,
the person will develop TB disease, become sick, and may spread
the disease to others. Although not everyone with latent TB
infection will develop TB disease, some people, such as those
with weakened immune systems, are at higher risk of progression
to TB disease.
The new regimen to treat latent TB reduces the doses required
for treatment from 270 daily doses to 12 once-weekly doses,
making it much easier for patients to take.
In the United States, the number of persons with TB disease
is at an all-time low (11,181 total cases were reported in
2010); however, approximately 4 percent of the U.S. population,
or 11 million people, are infected with the TB bacterium.
TB continues to disproportionately affect racial/ethnic minorities
and foreign-born individuals in this country.
"If we are to achieve TB elimination in the United States,
we must address the large number of people in this country
with latent TB infection," said Kevin Fenton, MD, director
of CDC's National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD,
and TB Prevention. "By effectively treating latent TB
infection, not only can we reduce the potentially deadly consequences
among those individuals, but we can also prevent many others
from ever becoming infected."
One of the largest TB prevention trials to date
The study lasted approximately 10 years and included 8,053
participants over the age of 2 who lived in countries with
low or medium TB incidence, with the majority from the United
States or Canada. Additional participants were located in
Brazil and Spain. Because of a known drug interaction between
some anti-HIV drugs and rifapentine, HIV-infected persons
taking antiretrovirals were not eligible for enrollment in
the study.
Participants were randomized to receive one of two preventive
treatment options -- a regimen consisting of three months
of once-weekly rifapentine 900 milligrams and isoniazid 900
milligrams given with supervision (that is, directly observed
therapy), or the current standard regimen used to treat latent
TB infection, consisting of nine months of daily isoniazid
300 milligrams, which was not supervised (that is, self-administered
by the participant). Each participant was evaluated for treatment-related
adverse events, adherence to treatment, survival, and development
of TB disease for a total of 33 months after the date of their
enrollment.
The new regimen was found to be safe and as effective as the
standard regimen in preventing new cases of TB disease, with
very few cases of TB disease developing in either study arm.
Seven cases occurred among those receiving the new treatment
regimen compared to 15 among those receiving the standard
treatment. Additionally, the percentage of participants completing
the new, shorter regimen was substantially higher (82 percent)
than the percentage completing the standard regimen (69 percent).
Next steps in implementation
Given the promise of these results, CDC has already held an
expert consultation to review the data and begin working on
new guidelines for its use in the United States. Researchers
caution that these results are only directly applicable to
countries with low-to-medium incidence of TB. Additional studies
will likely be needed before this new regimen can be recommended
in countries with a high incidence of TB, especially those
with high HIV prevalence and where the risk of TB re-infection
is greater.
The research was conducted through the TB Trials Consortium
(TBTC), a CDC-funded partnership of domestic and international
clinical investigators who conduct research on the prevention
and treatment of TB.
5/20/11
Reference
T
Sterling, et al. PREVENT TB: Results of a 12-dose, once-weekly
treatment of latent tuberculosis infection (LTI). American
Thoracic Society International Conference. Denver. May 13-18,
2011.
Other
Source
National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB
Prevention. Research Offers Simpler, Effective Treatment Option
for Latent TB Infection. Press release. May 16, 2011.
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