Effects of a Protein Calorie Supplement in HIV-infected Women With Tuberculosis
Effects of a Protein Calorie Supplement in HIV-infected Women With Tuberculosis
NCT ID: NCT01635153 Phase: NA Status: COMPLETED Enrollment: 151 Completion: 2014-07
Conditions
HIV, Tuberculosis
Interventions
Protein calorie supplement, Micronutrient
Summary
The objective of this randomized, controlled trial is to determine if adding a protein-calorie supplement (PCS) to the standard treatments for tuberculosis (TB) and HIV will improve health outcomes. The investigators will enroll 180 HIV-positive women with newly diagnosed active TB and without prior anti-retroviral therapy (ART). At baseline, the investigators will conduct dietary interviews, measure body composition, randomize subjects to receive a PCS (plus micronutritional supplements [MNS]) or control (MNS only) for the 6-month duration of anti-TB therapy (ATT) plus an additional 2 mos (8 mos total). Subjects will be followed monthly and have CD4 counts at baseline, 2, 8 and 12 months. At 2 months (i.e., at the end of the 4 drug intensive phase of TB treatment and start of the 2 drug continuation phase), all subjects will be started on anti-retroviral therapy (ART) based on Tanzanian Ministry of Health guidelines (currently: AZT/3TC/efavirenz). The primary endpoint will be change in CD4 count after 8 months (i.e., at end of PCS/MNS intervention and 2 months after completion of ATT).
Primary Outcome
Change in CD4 Count