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Pragmatic cluster-randomized trial of home-based preventive treatment for TB in Ethiopia and South Africa (CHIP-TB)

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Authors

Malhotra, Akash; Nonyane, Bareng A. S.; Shirey, Evan; Mulder, Christiaan; Hippner, Piotr; Mulatu, Fiseha; Ratshinanga, Andani; Mitiku, Petros; Cohn, Silvia; Conradie, Gideon; Chihota, Violet; Chaisson, Richard E.; Churchyard, Gavin J.; Golub, Jonathan; Dowdy, David; Sohn, Hojoon; Charalambous, Salome; Bedru, Ahmed; Salazar-Austin, Nicole

Issue Date
2023-07-25
Publisher
BMC
Citation
Trials, Vol.24(1):475
Keywords
TB preventive treatmentTPTContact investigationHousehold contact managementPediatric TBPragmatic implementation trialEthiopiaSouth AfricaTuberculosis
Abstract
Background
Each year, 1 million children develop TB resulting in over 200,000 child deaths. TB preventive treatment (TPT) is highly effective in preventing TB but remains poorly implemented for household child contacts. Home-based child contact management and TPT services may improve access to care. In this study, we aim to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of home-based contact management with TPT initiation in two TB high-burden African countries, Ethiopia and South Africa.

Methods
This pragmatic cluster randomized trial compares home-based versus facility-based care delivery models for contact management. Thirty-six clinics with decentralized TB services (18 in Ethiopia and 18 in South Africa) were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to conduct either home-based or facility-based contact management. The study will attempt to enroll all eligible close child contacts of infectious drug-sensitive TB index patients diagnosed and treated for TB by one of the study clinics. Child TB contact management, including contact tracing, child evaluation, and TPT initiation and follow-up, will take place in the childs home for the intervention arm and at the clinic for the control arm. The primary outcome is the cluster-level ratio of the number of household child contacts less than 15 years of age in Ethiopia and less than 5 years of age in South Africa initiated on TPT per index patient, comparing the intervention to the control arm. Secondary outcomes include child contact identification and the TB prevention continuum of care. Other implementation outcomes include acceptability, feasibility, fidelity, cost, and cost-effectiveness of the intervention.

Discussion
This implementation research trial will determine whether home-based contact management identifies and initiates more household child contacts on TPT than facility-based contact management.
ISSN
1745-6215
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/195462
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-023-07514-7
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