Tuberculosis Trials Consortium, Division of Tuberculosis Elimination, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Apr 11;6(4):e18358. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0018358.
Tuberculosis Trials Consortium Study 28, was a double blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, phase 2 clinical trial examining smear positive pulmonary Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Over the course of intensive phase therapy, patients from African sites had substantially delayed and lower rates of culture conversion to negative in liquid media compared to non-African patients. We explored potential explanations of this finding.
In TBTC Study 28, protocol-correct patients (n = 328) provided spot sputum specimens for M. tuberculosis culture in liquid media, at baseline and weeks 2, 4, 6 and 8 of study therapy. We compared sputum culture conversion for African and non-African patients stratified by four baseline measures of disease severity: AFB smear quantification, extent of disease on chest radiograph, cavity size and the number of days to detection of M. tuberculosis in liquid media using the Kaplan-Meier product-limit method. We evaluated specimen processing and culture procedures used at 29 study laboratories serving 27 sites.
African TB patients had more extensive disease at enrollment than non-African patients. However, African patients with the least disease by the 4 measures of disease severity had conversion rates on liquid media that were substantially lower than conversion rates in non-African patients with the greatest extent of disease. HIV infection, smoking and diabetes did not explain delayed conversion in Africa. Some inter-site variation in laboratory processing and culture procedures within accepted practice for clinical diagnostic laboratories was found.
Compared with patients from non-African sites, African patients being treated for TB had delayed sputum culture conversion and lower sputum conversion rates in liquid media that were not explained by baseline severity of disease, HIV status, age, smoking, diabetes or race. Further investigation is warranted into whether modest variation in laboratory processes substantially influences the efficacy outcomes of phase 2 TB treatment trials or if other factors (e.g., nutrition, host response) are involved.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00144417.
结核病临床试验联盟研究 28 号是一项双盲、随机、安慰剂对照、2 期临床试验,研究对象为涂片阳性的肺结核分枝杆菌患者。在强化期治疗过程中,与非非洲患者相比,来自非洲地区的患者的培养物转阴性的速度显著延迟,比例也更低。我们探讨了这一发现的潜在原因。
在 TBTC 研究 28 号中,按照方案要求,328 名患者提供了痰标本,用于液体培养基中结核分枝杆菌的培养,标本采集时间分别为基线时、治疗第 2、4、6、8 周。我们通过卡普兰-迈耶乘积限法,比较了非洲和非非洲患者的痰培养转阴性情况,分层因素为 4 项疾病严重程度的基线测量指标:AFB 涂片定量、胸部 X 光片上的病变范围、空洞大小以及在液体培养基中检测到结核分枝杆菌的天数。我们评估了为 27 个试验点服务的 29 个研究实验室使用的标本处理和培养程序。
非洲结核病患者在入组时的疾病程度比非非洲患者更为严重。然而,根据疾病严重程度的 4 项测量指标,疾病程度较轻的非洲患者的液体培养基转阴性率远低于疾病程度较重的非非洲患者。HIV 感染、吸烟和糖尿病并不能解释非洲患者转阴性的延迟。我们发现,某些试验点的实验室处理和培养程序在临床诊断实验室可接受的实践范围内存在一定的差异。
与非非洲地区的患者相比,接受结核病治疗的非洲患者的痰培养转阴性时间延迟,液体培养基中的转阴性率也较低,这不能用疾病严重程度、HIV 状态、年龄、吸烟、糖尿病或种族来解释。有必要进一步研究实验室过程中的细微差异是否会对 2 期结核病治疗试验的疗效结果产生实质性影响,或者是否涉及其他因素(如营养、宿主反应)。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00144417。