학술논문

Tuberculosis screening improves preventive therapy uptake (TB SCRIPT) trial among people living with HIV in Uganda: a study protocol of an individual randomized controlled trial
Document Type
article
Source
Trials. 23(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Rare Diseases
HIV/AIDS
Comparative Effectiveness Research
Tuberculosis
Infectious Diseases
Health Services
Prevention
Clinical Research
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
4.4 Population screening
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
Detection
screening and diagnosis
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Anti-Retroviral Agents
Antitubercular Agents
Clinical Trials
Phase III as Topic
HIV Infections
Humans
Multicenter Studies as Topic
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Uganda
HIV
Screening
C-reactive protein
Tuberculosis preventive therapy
Randomized controlled trial
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Cardiovascular System & Hematology
General & Internal Medicine
Clinical sciences
Epidemiology
Health services and systems
Language
Abstract
BackgroundPeople living with HIV (PLHIV) have an increased risk of developing active tuberculosis (TB). To reduce the burden of TB among PLHIV, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends systematic TB screening followed by (1) confirmatory TB testing for all who screen positive and (2) TB preventive therapy (TPT) for all TPT-eligible PLHIV who screen negative. Symptom-based screening remains the standard of care in most high TB burden settings, including Uganda. Despite having high sensitivity for active TB among antiretroviral-naïve PLHIV, symptom screening has poor specificity; as such, many high-risk PLHIV without active TB are not referred for TPT. C-reactive protein (CRP) is a promising alternative strategy for TB screening that has comparable sensitivity and higher specificity than symptom screening, and was endorsed by WHO in 2021. However, the impact of CRP-based TB screening on TB burden for PLHIV remains unclear.MethodsTB SCRIPT (TB Screening Improves Preventive Therapy Uptake) is a phase 3, multi-center, single-blinded, individual (1:1) randomized controlled trial evaluating the effectiveness of CRP-based TB screening on clinical outcomes of PLHIV. The trial aims to compare the effectiveness of a TB screening strategy based on CRP levels using a point-of-care (POC) assay on 2-year TB incidence and all-cause mortality (composite primary trial endpoint) and prevalent TB case detection and uptake of TPT (intermediate outcomes), relative to symptom-based TB screening (current practice).DiscussionThis study will be critical to improving selection of eligible PLHIV for TPT and helping guide the scale-up and integration of TB screening and TPT activities. This work will enable the field to improve TB screening by removing barriers to TPT initiation among eligible PLHIV, and provide randomized evidence to inform and strengthen WHO guidelines.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT04557176. Registered on September 21, 2020.