Treatment Duration for Abdominal Tuberculosis

Last updated: July 2, 2015
Sponsor: All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi
Overall Status: Completed

Phase

3

Condition

Hiv

Lung Disease

Treatment

N/A

Clinical Study ID

NCT01124929
Abdominal TB_RCT (RNTCP-DOTS)
  • Ages 18-65
  • All Genders
  • Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Study Summary

Most of the guidelines on the treatment of tuberculosis suggest that 6 months treatment is sufficient for extrapulmonary tuberculosis except for bone tuberculosis and tubercular meningitis. Despite these recommendations, most physicians treating abdominal tuberculosis use antituberculous therapy for 9 months, sometimes even 12 months without any scientific justification. In a randomized controlled trial, Balasubramaniam et al reported no difference in success rate of 6mo (99%) vs 12 months (94%) antituberculous drugs (conventional strategy) in the treatment of abdominal tuberculosis.

Although Directly Observed Therapy (DOTs) have been proved to be effective in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis, lymph nodal tuberculosis, however, there is a lack of data on efficacy of DOTS in other extra-pulmonary disease including abdominal tuberculosis. Therefore, there is an urgent need to establish the efficacy of DOTs strategy of antituberculous therapy in the treatment of abdominal tuberculosis.

Therefore, the investigators planned to conduct a multicenter randomized controlled trial to determine the difference in the recurrence of disease after only observation for three months and three months extension of DOTs in a subset of patients with definite clinical response after 6 months of DOTs.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion criteria:

  • Newly diagnosed patients with Intestinal TB or Peritoneal TB

  • Has not received ATT for Tuberculosis any where in the body during past 5 years

  • Patients having good general health and not too sick.

  • Patients willing and likely to comply with the study procedures and follow up

  • Patients should give informed consent.

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Eighteen year is a cut off age for definition of adult and pediatric and adolescentmedicine. The dosing of drugs are different in these two age groups. Therefore we planto include patients of more than 18 years of age with abdominal TB in this study.

  • Intake of ATT during the past 5 years

  • Doubtful diagnosis

  • Crohn's disease

  • Patients with HIV and AIDS may have another systemic opportunistic infectionsincluding GI infections like cryptosporidiosis, Microsporidiosis or isosporiasis.There may be an overlap of GI manifestations such as diarrhea, abdominal pain, anemia,fever. Therefore, assessment of response to anti-tuberculosis therapy may be blurred.In order to keep the study group homogenous for comparison, we plan to exclude allthose with HIV infection

  • Chronic Liver Disease

  • Associated significant co-morbidities

  • H/O Sensitivity

  • Peritoneal carcinomatosis

  • Patients must not been used investigational agents during the past 6 months

  • Unwilling patient

Study Design

Total Participants: 197
Study Start date:
July 01, 2008
Estimated Completion Date:
April 30, 2014

Study Description

Rationale Most of the guidelines on the treatment of tuberculosis suggest that 6 months treatment is sufficient for extrapulmonary tuberculosis except for bone tuberculosis and tubercular meningitis. Despite these recommendations, most physicians treating abdominal tuberculosis use antituberculous therapy for 9 months, sometimes even 12 months without any scientific justification. In a randomized controlled trial, Balasubramaniam et al reported no difference in success rate of 6mo (99%) vs 12 months (94%) antituberculous drugs (conventional strategy) in the treatment of abdominal tuberculosis.

Although DOTS have been proved to be effective in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis, lymph nodal tuberculosis, however, there is a lack of data on efficacy of DOTS in other extra-pulmonary disease including abdominal tuberculosis. The aim of the present study is not to assess the efficacy of DOTs but whether the Cat I regimen for 6 months is effective in the treatment of abdominal tuberculosis. We, therefore planned to conduct a multicenter randomized controlled trial to determine the difference in the efficacy and recurrence rate in 6months and 9 months of intermittent short course category I regimen under RNTCP.

Hypothesis There may not be a significant difference in the efficacy and recurrence rate of abdominal tuberculosis in those treated for six months vs those treated for 9 months with intermittent short course category I regimen under RNTCP.

Objectives

Primary objectives:

  1. To determine the efficacy of intermittent short course chemotherapy for 6 months under Directly Observed Therapy (Category I under RNTCP) in treatment of abdominal tuberculosis (proportion of patients responding to treatment)

  2. To determine difference in the recurrence of disease between the two randomized groups after only observation for three months and extension of RNTCP Cat I for three months in a subset of patients with definite clinical response after 6 months of DOTs Secondary objective

  3. To study the effect of anti-tubercular drugs on the natural history of intestinal stricture due to tuberculosis Outcomes

Outcome measures:

Primary:

  1. Response to treatment (6 months and nine months of RNTCP Cat I treatment) as defined earlier

  2. Recurrence of symptoms of abdominal tuberculosis (intestinal and peritoneal) after 1 year of follow up in those who receive 6 months or 9 months of Cat I treatment.

Connect with a study center

  • Dr Govind K Makharia

    New Delhi, Delhi 110029
    India

    Site Not Available

Map preview placeholder

Not the study for you?

Let us help you find the best match. Sign up as a volunteer and receive email notifications when clinical trials are posted in the medical category of interest to you.