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. 2025 Jul 16:S2213-2600(25)00194-8.
doi: 10.1016/S2213-2600(25)00194-8. Online ahead of print.

Bedaquiline, delamanid, linezolid, and clofazimine for rifampicin-resistant and fluoroquinolone-resistant tuberculosis (endTB-Q): an open-label, multicentre, stratified, non-inferiority, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial

Collaborators, Affiliations

Bedaquiline, delamanid, linezolid, and clofazimine for rifampicin-resistant and fluoroquinolone-resistant tuberculosis (endTB-Q): an open-label, multicentre, stratified, non-inferiority, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial

Lorenzo Guglielmetti et al. Lancet Respir Med. .

Abstract

Background: Pre-extensively drug-resistant (pre-XDR) tuberculosis (ie, multidrug-resistant or rifampicin-resistant with additional resistance to any fluoroquinolone) is difficult to treat. endTB-Q aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of bedaquiline, delamanid, linezolid, and clofazimine (BDLC) compared with the standard of care for patients with pre-XDR tuberculosis.

Methods: This open-label, multicentre, stratified, non-inferiority, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial was conducted in ten hospitals in India, Kazakhstan, Lesotho, Pakistan, Peru, and Viet Nam. Participants aged 15 years or older who had pulmonary tuberculosis with resistance to rifampicin and fluoroquinolones were included. Participants were randomly assigned (2:1) to the BDLC group (all-oral bedaquiline 400 mg once per day for 2 weeks followed by 200 mg three times per week, delamanid 100 mg twice per day, linezolid 600 mg once per day for 16 weeks and then either 300 mg once per day or 600 mg three times per week, and clofazimine 100 mg once per day) or the control group (individualised WHO-recommended longer standard of care). Randomisation was stratified by country and baseline disease extent. BDLC was administered for 39 weeks (9-month regimen) for extensive disease and 24 weeks (6-month regimen) for limited disease and extended to 9 months for those with a positive culture at 8 weeks or later or a missing 8-week culture result. Site staff and participants were not masked, whereas investigators and laboratory staff were masked to treatment assignment. The primary endpoint was favourable outcome (two consecutive, negative cultures including one between weeks 65 and 73; or favourable bacteriological, radiological, and clinical evolution) at week 73 after randomisation in the modified intention-to-treat (mITT) and per-protocol populations. We report the risk differences adjusted for stratification variables, with a non-inferiority margin of -12%. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03896685.

Findings: Between April 4, 2020, and March 28, 2023, 1030 individuals were screened and 324 (31%) were randomly assigned (219 to the BDLC group and 105 to the control group). 114 (46%) participants were female and 133 (54%) were male. Median age was 30·5 years (IQR 21·6-43·0). 157 (64%) participants had extensive disease at baseline. In the BDLC group, 47 (29%) of 163 were assigned to receive the 6-month regimen and 116 (71%) the 9-month regimen. The core regimen of BDLC plus one or more other drugs was used for 76 (91%) of 84 participants in the control group. At week 73, favourable outcome was reached by 141 (87%) participants in the BDLC group versus 75 (89%) in the control group in the mITT population (adjusted risk difference 0·2% [95% CI -9·1 to 9·5]; pnon-inferiority=0·0051) and by 138 (88%) of 157 versus 71 (93%) of 76 in the per-protocol population (adjusted risk difference -3·5% [-12·8 to 5·9]; pnon-inferiority=0·037). Overall non-inferiority was not shown. 145 (68%) of 213 participants in the BDLC group and 77 (73%) of 105 in the control group had at least one grade 3 or higher adverse event, with eight (4%) and two (2%) all-cause deaths by week 73, respectively.

Interpretation: The shortened BDLC strategy was not non-inferior to the control. Accumulating evidence suggests that this patient population might require longer, reinforced regimens.

Funding: Unitaid, Médecins Sans Frontières, Partners In Health, Interactive Research and Development, Ramón Areces Foundation, the Jung Foundation for Science and Research, Research Foundation-Flanders.

Translations: For the Hindi, Marathi, Spanish, Vietnamese, Russian, Urdu and French translations of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests SC and NL received support from Unitaid. HM was awarded a Fellowship to the University of Cape Town from the Wellcome Trust. IM received consulting fees from the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) Access Campaign as an APH consultant. PPJP received funding from Partners in Health (PIH) for this study. MLR was the coleader on the endTB grant from Unitaid; received cofunding for the endTB-Q clinical trial by MSF; is provided 20% full-time employee equivalent in 2024 and 2025 from PIH for working on Global TB issues, including writing this manuscript and other manuscripts; is a technical project lead for arcTB (possible Unitaid grant at 50% full-time employee equivalent from 2025 to 2027); is a senior global health physician (average 20% full-time employee equivalent in the past 3 years); is the coinvestigator on the STEM-TB grant (average 5% full-time employee equivalent); received a career development grant in nutrition and TB from Brigham and Women's Hospital, a USAID Regional Approaches for Eradicating Tuberculosis in Central Asia grant (10% for 3 years starting Oct 1, 2024), and a grant from USAID Global Resilience Against Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis (expected to average 40% in 5 years starting Oct 1, 2024); provided consulting for WHO EURO (an observational study of modified short MDR-TB regimens in Europe and Central Asia); received travel support from WHO for a 3-day meeting on MDR-TB regimens and treatment in 2023; travel and accommodation support from Unitaid for TB meetings related to the World Union TB conference 2023; travel support for presenting the endTB trial to Unitaid and WHO in August, 2023; travel support for an endTB investigators meeting in September, 2023; and travel and accommodation support to attend the World Union TB conference in 2024. GEV received payments to his institution from Unitaid, MSF, PIH (SPHQ15-LOA-045), National Institutes of Health National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIH NIAID; K08 AI141740); received grants or contracts from NIH NIAID (R01 AI135124, R25 AI147375, R34 AI179568, U01 AI152980, UM1 AI068636, and UM1 AI179699); USAID (7200AA22CA00005); and received consulting fees from the Gates Medical Research Institute. All other authors declare no competing interests. DVN, LVD, and HTTP received funding to their institution from PIH for this study. BCdJ received grants from Janssen Pharmaceuticals for the C211 trial on bedaquiline for pediatric TB and for the BE-PEOPLE trial on leprosy post-exposure prophylaxis; and received grants to their institution from the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO; number FWO G0A7720N and FWO W001822N). CDM received a grant to their institution from Unitaid. CB was an MSF employee from 2015 to 2023. LG received a grant from Unitaid for the endTB project.

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