Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00164450

TBTC Study 26 PK: Rifapentine Pharmacokinetics in Children During Treatment of Latent TB Infection

TBTC Study 26 PK: Rifapentine Pharmacokinetics in Children Receiving Once Weekly Rifapentine and Isoniazid for the Treatment of Latent Tuberculosis Infection

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
230 (estimated)
Sponsor
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention · Federal
Sex
All
Age
2 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Compared to adults, children appear to require higher weight-based doses of rifapentine to acheive comparable drug levels. TBTC Study 26, a study of the effectiveness and tolerability of weekly rifapentine/isoniazid for three months versus daily isoniazid for nine months for the treatment of latent tuberculosis infection, has been amended to include children ages 2-11 based on an initial single-dose study and pharmacokinetic modeling. Study 26PK evaluates the adequacy of the doses chosen for young children enrolled in Study 26 with a single blood draw, 24 hours after the third or subsequent weekly Study 26 dose of rifapentine and isoniazid. An adult control is enrolled for each child enrolled.

Detailed description

The pharmacokinetics of rifapentine have been studied in adults, adolescents (ages 12-15 years), and patients with hepatic dysfunction and HIV infection. However, there are no published data on the efficacy, safety or pharmacokinetics of rifapentine in children. This lack of data has precluded till now enrollment of children less than 12 years old in TBTC Study 26, a study of the effectiveness and tolerability of weekly rifapentine/isoniazid for three months versus daily isoniazid for nine months for the treatment of latent tuberculosis infection, a phase 3 treatment trial that will enroll 8000 persons with latent tuberculosis infection. A recently completed initial evaluation of rifapentine pharmacokinetics among children receiving a single dose of rifapentine demonstrated significantly lower exposures of rifapentine among children compared to adults, when children were given weight-based doses chosen to be comparable to a 600 mg oral dose in adults. This reduced exposure suggested that children require higher weight-based doses than adults and a model was constructed to estimate rifapentine doses in children that would result in exposures similar to the 900 mg dose used for adults in Study 26. Study 26 has been amended to include children ages 2-11 based on the initial single-dose study and pharmacokinetic modeling. The purpose of Study 26PK is to evaluate the adequacy of the doses chosen for young children who enrolled in Study 26. Briefly, this study aims to: * determine whether rifapentine exposure is equivalent in young children receiving weight-based dosing to adults receiving 900 mg. * correlate rifapentine exposure with toxicity in young children * validate accuracy of weight-based dosing in children * determine rifapentine bioavailability in children * determine association in adults between polymorphisms of MDR1 genotype and rifapentine exposure * correlate isoniazid concentrations in adults with acetylator status

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGRifapentine + isoniazid once weekly for 3 months

Timeline

Start date
2005-09-01
Primary completion
2008-08-01
Completion
2008-08-01
First posted
2005-09-14
Last updated
2008-08-25

Locations

24 sites across 4 countries: United States, Brazil, Canada, Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00164450. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.