[HTML][HTML] Three months of rifapentine and isoniazid for latent tuberculosis infection

TR Sterling, ME Villarino, AS Borisov… - … England Journal of …, 2011 - Mass Medical Soc
TR Sterling, ME Villarino, AS Borisov, N Shang, F Gordin, E Bliven-Sizemore, J Hackman…
New England Journal of Medicine, 2011Mass Medical Soc
Background Treatment of latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection is an essential
component of tuberculosis control and elimination. The current standard regimen of
isoniazid for 9 months is efficacious but is limited by toxicity and low rates of treatment
completion. Methods We conducted an open-label, randomized noninferiority trial
comparing 3 months of directly observed once-weekly therapy with rifapentine (900 mg) plus
isoniazid (900 mg)(combination-therapy group) with 9 months of self-administered daily …
Background
Treatment of latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection is an essential component of tuberculosis control and elimination. The current standard regimen of isoniazid for 9 months is efficacious but is limited by toxicity and low rates of treatment completion.
Methods
We conducted an open-label, randomized noninferiority trial comparing 3 months of directly observed once-weekly therapy with rifapentine (900 mg) plus isoniazid (900 mg) (combination-therapy group) with 9 months of self-administered daily isoniazid (300 mg) (isoniazid-only group) in subjects at high risk for tuberculosis. Subjects were enrolled from the United States, Canada, Brazil, and Spain and followed for 33 months. The primary end point was confirmed tuberculosis, and the noninferiority margin was 0.75%.
Results
In the modified intention-to-treat analysis, tuberculosis developed in 7 of 3986 subjects in the combination-therapy group (cumulative rate, 0.19%) and in 15 of 3745 subjects in the isoniazid-only group (cumulative rate, 0.43%), for a difference of 0.24 percentage points. Rates of treatment completion were 82.1% in the combination-therapy group and 69.0% in the isoniazid-only group (P<0.001). Rates of permanent drug discontinuation owing to an adverse event were 4.9% in the combination-therapy group and 3.7% in the isoniazid-only group (P=0.009). Rates of investigator-assessed drug-related hepatotoxicity were 0.4% and 2.7%, respectively (P<0.001).
Conclusions
The use of rifapentine plus isoniazid for 3 months was as effective as 9 months of isoniazid alone in preventing tuberculosis and had a higher treatment-completion rate. Long-term safety monitoring will be important. (Funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; PREVENT TB ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00023452.)
The New England Journal Of Medicine