Isoniazid plus antiretroviral therapy to prevent tuberculosis: a randomised double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Molebogeng X Rangaka, Robert J Wilkinson, Andrew Boulle, Judith R Glynn, Katherine Fielding, Gilles van Cutsem, Katalin A Wilkinson, Rene Goliath, Shaheed Mathee, Eric Goemaere, Gary Maartens, Molebogeng X Rangaka, Robert J Wilkinson, Andrew Boulle, Judith R Glynn, Katherine Fielding, Gilles van Cutsem, Katalin A Wilkinson, Rene Goliath, Shaheed Mathee, Eric Goemaere, Gary Maartens

Abstract

Background: Antiretroviral therapy reduces the risk of tuberculosis, but tuberculosis is more common in people with HIV than in people without HIV. We aimed to assess the effect of isoniazid preventive therapy on the risk of tuberculosis in people infected with HIV-1 concurrently receiving antiretroviral therapy.

Methods: For this pragmatic randomised double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in Khayelitsha, South Africa, we randomly assigned (1:1) patients to receive either isoniazid preventive therapy or a placebo for 12 months (could be completed during 15 months). Randomisation was done with random number generator software. Participants, physicians, and pharmacy staff were masked to group assignment. The primary endpoint was time to development of incident tuberculosis (definite, probable, or possible). We excluded tuberculosis at screening by sputum culture. We did a modified intention-to-treat analysis and excluded all patients randomly assigned to groups who withdrew before receiving study drug or whose baseline sputum culture results suggested prevalent tuberculosis. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00463086.

Findings: 1329 participants were randomly assigned to receive isoniazid preventive therapy (n=662) or placebo (n=667) between Jan 31, 2008, and Sept 31, 2011, and contributed 3227 person-years of follow-up to the analysis. We recorded 95 incident cases of tuberculosis; 37 were in the isoniazid preventive therapy group (2·3 per 100 person-years, 95% CI 1·6-3·1), and 58 in the placebo group (3·6 per 100 person-years, 2·8-4·7; hazard ratio [HR] 0·63, 95% CI 0·41-0·94). Study drug was discontinued because of grade 3 or 4 raised alanine transaminase concentrations in 19 of 662 individuals in the isoniazid preventive therapy group and ten of the 667 individuals in the placebo group (risk ratio 1·9, 95% CI 0·90-4·09). We noted no evidence that the effect of isoniazid preventive therapy was restricted to patients who were positive on tuberculin skin test or interferon gamma release assay (adjusted HR for patients with negative tests 0·43 [0·21-0·86] and 0·43 [0·20-0·96]; for positive tests 0·86 [0·37-2·00] and 0·55 [0·26-1·24], respectively).

Interpretation: Without a more predictive test or a multivariate algorithm that predicts benefit, isoniazid preventive therapy should be recommended to all patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in moderate or high incidence areas irrespective of tuberculin skin test or interferon gamma release assay status.

Funding: Department of Health of South Africa, the Wellcome Trust, Médecins Sans Frontières, European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership, Foundation for Innovation and New Diagnostics, the European Union, and Hasso Plattner (Institute of Infectious Diseases and Molecular Medicine, University of Cape Town).

Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1. CONSORT Flow Diagram
Figure 1. CONSORT Flow Diagram
*Reasons for excluding 291 individuals that did not meet the inclusion criteria: 211 prevalent TB diagnosed, 13 prior IPT, 19 pregnancy, 23 pre-existing Grade 3 toxicity (ALT, peripheral neuropathy or rash), 1 age under 18 years, 24 already on TB treatment. **Drug toxicities include: ALT ≥ grade 3, clinical hepatitis, ≥ grade 2 rash or peripheral neuropathy.
Figure 2a. Time to tuberculosis from randomisation
Figure 2a. Time to tuberculosis from randomisation
Placebo group was prescribed ART plus placebo and isoniazid group was prescribed ART plus isoniazid. Numbers show the numbers being followed at each time point, and the numbers in parentheses indicate new tuberculosis cases in each period. Logrank test p-value for equality of survival curves =0.02
Figure 2b. Cumulative hazard plot for ART…
Figure 2b. Cumulative hazard plot for ART vs. ART plus IPT effect by time period since randomisation
Nelson-Aalen cumulative hazard plot on a logarithmic y-scale to indicate proportionality of hazards over time periods. HRu= unadjusted hazard ratio (95% confidence interval indicated in parentheses). Treatment ended 1 year after randomisation. Likelihood ratio test for interaction of treatment arm with time period P=0.61; & assuming linear trend for time period P=0.34.
Figure 2c. Time to death from randomisation
Figure 2c. Time to death from randomisation
Placebo group was prescribed ART plus placebo and isoniazid group was prescribed ART plus isoniazid. Logrank test p-value for equality of survival curves= 0.32

Source: PubMed

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