Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT06593080
The DECIDE-TB Trial; Validation of Treatment Decision Algorithms for Childhood Tuberculosis
Validation of Treatment Decision Algorithms for Childhood Tuberculosis at District Health Care Levels in Mozambique and Zambia - the Decide-TB Cluster-randomized Pragmatic Trial
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 30,240 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Chishala Chabala · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 14 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
The Decide-TB project aims to generate evidence for the implementation of a comprehensive Treatment Decision Algorithms (TDA) based approach for TB in children living in high TB burden and resource-limited countries, at District Hospital (DH) and Primary Health Centre (PHC) levels, and to facilitate the integration of this evidence within practices and policies. This programmatic pilot led by the National TB Programs (NTP) will test a TDA-based approach integrating TB screening, diagnosis, treatment decision-making, and disease severity assessment for shorter treatment eligibility, for use at a lower level of healthcare. This TDA-based approach will be evaluated in a hybrid effectiveness implementation study based on a pragmatic stepped wedge cluster-randomized trial. The Decide TB project will be implemented at the district level, targeting five districts in each country. Each cluster in a district will be made up of one district hospital and six primary health centers. The study will develop a Clinical Decision Support System (CDSS) to operationalize the use of TDAs, and strengthen District Health Information Systems (DHIS2) to collect individual data, which will contribute to monitoring and evaluation, clinical mentoring, and supervision by the country's NTPs.
Detailed description
The Decide-TB trial is a pragmatic cluster-randomized study utilizing a stepped wedge design to provide scientific evidence on a comprehensive TDA-based approach for TB screening, diagnosis, and treatment in children under 15 years at low healthcare levels in Zambia and Mozambique. The trial's primary objective is to evaluate the effectiveness, feasibility, implementation, acceptability, costs, cost-effectiveness, and adoption of a TDA-based approach for childhood TB screening, diagnosis, and treatment decision-making under programmatic conditions at District Hospitals (DH) and Primary Health Centres (PHC) levels in these countries. There are five specific objectives corresponding to the trial's research components: 1. To assess the effectiveness of the comprehensive TDA-based approach in increasing TB case detection in children as compared to the Standard of Care (SOC), and in providing good quality TB diagnosis and treatment decision (diagnostic accuracy and reliability of treatment decision for TB and shorter treatment). 2. To describe the implementation and the feasibility of using the comprehensive TDA-based approach, including associated digital tools, and to identify contextual determinants influencing implementation and contribute to improved implementation/adaptations throughout intervention delivery. 3. To assess preferences, acceptability, and perceived feasibility of using the comprehensive TDA-based approach, including associated digital tools, among end-users, beneficiaries, and key stakeholders. 4. To assess the costs from the health system and the beneficiary (parents/caregivers of children) perspective, the cost-effectiveness of using the comprehensive TDA-based approach, including associated digital tools, and the budget impact of scaling up the intervention. 5. To assess the factors and stakeholders that support or constrain the adoption of the comprehensive TDA-based approach as health policy at district level. The intervention will be implemented as a programmatic pilot, following the National TB Programs' decision in Mozambique and Zambia to adopt a TDA-based approach in line with World Health Organisation's (WHO) conditional recommendations. Additionally, both the standard of care and the intervention will be implemented in a non-randomized district to document diagnostic accuracy throughout the trial. The Decide-TB trial is a hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial (type 2), assessing both the clinical intervention's effectiveness and the feasibility and utility of the implementation strategy. Diagnostic accuracy of both the standard of care and the intervention will be evaluated in an additional district, which will transition to the intervention phase alongside the last district selected per the stepped wedge design. Aggregated data will be retrospectively collected over 12 months from all participating districts and health facilities. The Decide-TB trial endpoints include effectiveness, acceptability, implementation, health economics, and health policy. Effectiveness endpoints include the proportion of children who started TB treatment, the time it takes to make a treatment decision, and the consistency of TDA results with final treatment decisions, among other factors. Acceptability endpoints consider user preferences and local social value, whereas implementation endpoints evaluate the practicality, fidelity, contextual aspects, and sustainability of the TDA-based method. Health economics endpoints include cost assessments, cost-effectiveness, and budget impact of scaling up the TDA-based approach vs the standard of care, while health policy endpoints look at key stakeholders' roles, practices, and policy translation processes.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | The comprehensive TDA based approach | The intervention consists of implementing a comprehensive TDA-based approach for TB diagnosis and treatment decision-making, including shorter treatment for non-severe TB in children identified as TB presumptive cases through a CDSS. It will also include the management of high-risk groups. In practice, all sick children will be assessed using the WHO-suggested TDAs A with CXR (DH) and B without CXR (PHC). CLHIV and those hospitalised with SAM at DH will have further assessment and treatment decisions based on the PAANTHER and TB-Speed SAM TDAs, respectively. Clinical and microbiological assessment data will be incorporated into a CDSS to help with the clinical decision to initiate TB treatment. The CDSS will incorporate specific features and test results for high-risk group children based on the PAANTHER TDA and the TB-Speed SAM TDA and will incorporate the results of the severity assessment to guide the choice of TB treatment duration once children are diagnosed with TB. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2024-06-01
- Primary completion
- 2027-08-31
- Completion
- 2027-08-31
- First posted
- 2024-09-19
- Last updated
- 2026-03-24
Locations
29 sites across 1 country: Zambia
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06593080. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.