Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB) poses a great threat to global health. Increasing evidence of novel regimens in trial settings has risen, but the combinations of oral shorter regimens have not been optimised. An evaluation of the efficacy and safety of short-term regimens utilizing various drug combinations is essential across different settings. METHODS: INSPIRE TB is a pragmatic, multicentre, randomised, controlled, non-inferiority open-label trial to evaluate novel regimens in pulmonary RR-TB patients of 16-75 years old with or without fluoroquinolone resistance. Before randomisation, an individualized assessment is conducted, considering drug susceptibility, contradictions, tolerance. Eligible participants are randomised based on fluoroquinolone susceptibility results from the Xpert MTB/XDR assay. Participants susceptible to fluoroquinolones are randomised to receive either one of seven different nine-month oral regimens or a nine-month standard-of-care regimen as the control. The experimental arms are five-drug regimens, each consisting of five agents selected from the following: bedaquiline, linezolid, a fluoroquinolone, cycloserine, clofazimine and pyrazinamide. Fluoroquinolone-resistant participants are randomised to either a 9-month oral regimen (bedaquiline, cycloserine, clofazimine, linezolid and pyrazinamide), or a 20-month conventional regimen as control in a 1:1 ratio. The primary outcome is the proportion of participants with a favourable outcome (two negative culture for Mycobacterium Tuberculosis, the latest sample collected between month 21 and 23) at 21 months after randomisation in the modified intention-to-treat population, measured in fluoroquinolone-susceptible and fluoroquinolone-resistant participants respectively. A sample size of 832 fluoroquinolone-susceptible RR-TB patients and 234 fluoroquinolone-resistant RR-TB patients afford 80% power to establish non-inferiority with a non-inferiority margin of 10% at a one-sided α level of 2.5%. The type I error will be controlled with a fixed-sequence approach. DISCUSSION: Identifying safer and effective short regimens remains an obstacle for drug-resistant tuberculosis and more treatment options are needed to benefit patients from different countries and settings to reduce disease burden. The INSPIRE TB study hopes to provide robust evidence on various options of safer and effective 9-month oral regimens for RR-TB in China. TRAIL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrial.gov, NCT05081401. Registered on October 18, 2021; the record was lastupdated for study protocol version 6.0, on 06 April 2025.