Common treatment of TB in advanced HIV patients doesn’t save more lives

Date: 03/17/2016

Publication:

Medical XPress

In a report on the so-called REMEMBER (Reducing Early Mortality and Early Morbidity by Empiric Tuberculosis Treatment) study—a 10-nation, randomized clinical trial of adult outpatients—investigators concluded that there was no added benefit of using four drugs for TB over just using one drug, isoniazid, to save lives in people with advanced HIV/AIDS.

Read Full Article

Clinical Trials

A5300B/I2003B/PHOENIX, Protecting Households On Exposure to...

This study will compare the efficacy and safety of 26 weeks of delamanid (DLM) versus 26 weeks of isoniazid (INH) for preventing...

Read More

A5322: Long-Term Follow-up of Older HIV-infected Adults in...

The A5322 protocol is a long-term observational study, with a planned series of analyses of data to be collected from an...

Read More

A5253: Sensitivity and Specificity of Mycobacterium...

An estimated 3 million HIV-infected individuals will enter programs for antiretroviral (ARV) treatment in the coming year, with...

Read More

ACTIV-2/A5401: Adaptive Platform Treatment for Outpatients...

Rationale: There is an urgent need for a platform to rapidly evaluate therapies in the outpatient setting, to prevent disease...

Read More

P1078: A Phase IV Randomized Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled...

P1078 is a Phase IV, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of HIV-infected pregnant women and the infants born to...

Read More