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Protocol > Research Protocol

The endTB observational study protocol: treatment of MDR-TB with bedaquiline or delamanid containing regimens

Khan UT, Huerga H, Khan AS, Mitnick CD, Hewison CCH, Varaine FFV, Bastard M, Rich ML, Franke MF, Atwood S, Khan PY, Seung KJ
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Abstract
BACKGROUND
At a time when programs were struggling to design effective regimens for the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), the marketing authorization of bedaquiline and delamanid was a critical development in the MDR-TB treatment landscape. However, despite their availability for routine programmatic use, the uptake of these drugs has remained slow; concerns included a lack of evidence on safety and efficacy and the need to protect the new drugs from the development of acquired resistance. As part of the endTB Project, we aimed to address these barriers by generating evidence on safety and efficacy of bedaquiline or delamanid based MDR-TB regimens.

METHODS
This is a protocol for a multi-center prospective cohort study to enroll 2600 patients from April 2015 through September 2018 in 17 countries. The protocol describes inclusion of patients started on treatment with bedaquiline- or delamanid- containing regimens under routine care, who consented to participate in the endTB observational study. Patient follow-up was according to routine monitoring schedules recommended for patients receiving bedaquiline or delamanid as implemented at each endTB site. Therefore, no additional tests were performed as a part of the study. Data were to be collected in a customized, open-source electronic medical record (EMR) system developed as a part of the endTB Project across all 17 countries.

DISCUSSION
The endTB observational study will generate evidence on safety and efficacy of bedaquiline- and delamanid-containing regimens in a large, extremely heterogeneous group of MDR-TB patients, from 17 epidemiologically diverse countries. The systematic, prospective data collection of repeated effectiveness and safety measures, and analyses performed on these data, will improve the quality of evidence available to inform MDR-TB treatment and policy decisions. Further, the resources available to countries through implementation of the endTB project will have permitted countries to: gain experience with the use of these drugs in MDR-TB regimens, improve local capacity to record and report adverse events (pharmacovigilance), and enhance significantly the body of data available for safety evaluation of these drugs and other novel treatments.
Countries
ArmeniaBangladeshBelarusEthiopiaGeorgiaHaitiIndonesiaKazakhstanKenyaNorth KoreaKyrgyzstanLesothoMyanmarPakistanPeruSouth AfricaViet Nam
Subject Area
antibiotic resistancetuberculosisantimicrobial resistance
Collections
The endTB project
DOI
10.1186/s12879-019-4378-4
Published Date
20-Aug-2019
PubMed ID
31429722
Languages
English
Journal
BMC Infectious Diseases
Volume / Issue / Pages
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages 733
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