NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07296055
Endobronchial Valve in Tubercular and NTM Pulmonary Cavities.
Tuberculosis (TB) is a complex disease in which the lungs are the primary site of infection. Infection is acquired through inhalation of droplet nuclei laden with Mycobacterium bacilli (M. tuberculosis) that settle in the alveoli as the primary focus. TB is characterized by a gradual expansion of infection and cavitation that causes progressive tissue destruction. Furthermore, the increase in drug-resistant forms of TB, including multidrug resistance (MDR) and pre-extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR), is becoming increasingly concerning. Treatment of pharmacosensitive diseases involves a duration of no less than 6 months, while that of MDR-TB and XDR-TB are even longer; generally well above 24 months. Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTMs), or atypical mycobacteria, are organisms that cause various diseases such as skin and soft tissue infections, lymphadenitis, lung infections, disseminated infections, and a wide range of more rarely encountered infections that do not differ from tuberculosis in anatomy and radiologically even though they usually do not develop the primary complex. Given that the treatment success rate is unsatisfactory, there is an urgent need for new drugs and additional interventions to improve outcomes, both in patients with MDR/XDR-TB and in patients with difficult-to-treat NTM.
One-way endobronchial valves (EBVs) have been used as an effective lung volume reduction strategy in emphysema without significant adverse events. The mechanism consists in inducing atelectasis, that is, creating a poorly ventilated environment with reduced oxygen tension. This reduced oxygen tension is unfavorable for the survival and proliferation of mycobacteria. Therefore, using these devices to treat cavities caused by multidrug-resistant mycobacteria or in patients not eligible for surgical therapy should reduce or completely heal the cavity, creating an inhospitable environment for the bacteria, slowing or eliminating their growth.
Condition/disease: Pulmonary MDR/XDR-TB or NTM (difficult to treat or resistant to treatment) Number of patients to be enrolled: 30 It is a single-center, randomized, controlled, open-label, two-arm study.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years
Multidrug Resistance Tubercolosis
Non Tubercolar Micobacteriosis