PET-CT outcomes from a randomised controlled trial of rosuvastatin as an adjunct to standard tuberculosis treatment.

Autor: Cross, Gail B., Sari, Intan P., Burkill, Sarah M., Yap, Chee Woei, Nguyen, Han, Quyet, Do, Dalay, Victoria B., Gutierrez, Emmanuel, Balanag, Vincent M., Castillo, Randy J., Chang, Christina C., Kelleher, Anthony D., O'Doherty, Jim, Paton, Nicholas I.
Zdroj: Nature Communications; 12/2/2024, Vol. 15 Issue 1, p1-11, 11p
Abstrakt: Adjunctive rosuvastatin for rifampicin-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis (rs-PTB) shows no effect on microbiological or radiological outcomes in a phase IIb randomised, controlled trial (NCT04504851). We explore the impact of adjunctive rosuvastatin on 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) imaging in a sub-study of 24 participants. Changes in standardised uptake value (SUVmax, SUVmean), Total Metabolic Volume, (TMV), Total Lesion Glycolysis (TLG), cavity diameter and volume, between week 0 and week 8 post-randomisation, are evaluated. Here we show no evidence of difference in the reduction in TLG [median 65.8% for the rosuvastatin group (Q1, Q3 38.6, 94.5) vs 64.3% for standard tuberculosis treatment group (Q1, Q3 −20.0, 81.7), P = 0.32], reduction in cavity volume on CT [median 3.2 cm3 (IQR 11.1, 0.5) for rosuvastatin, 2.2 cm3 (IQR 4.6, 0.7) for control (p = 0.72)], or any other PET-CT parameter measured. We show that the first 8-weeks of standard tuberculosis treatment results in a reduction in the volumetric indices (TLG and TMV), but had little change in SUVmax or SUVmean. Change in TLG and TMV holds promise as biomarkers of tuberculosis treatment response: future PET-CT studies should evaluate their role in predicting relapse-free cure, and the overall role of 18F-FDG-PET-CT as a tool for early-phase tuberculosis clinical trials. In this work, authors report on the PET-CT outcomes from the use of adjunctive statin therapy, rosuvastatin, in the intensive phase of tuberculosis (TB) treatment. Rosuvastatin had no impact on PET-CT changes when used as an adjunct to TB treatment. 8-weeks of TB treatment resulted in ~50% reduction in total lesion glycolysis (TLG), a metric that combines the volume of lung affected and metabolic activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index