TY - JOUR
T1 - Finding the optimal regimen for Mycobacteroides abscessus treatment (FORMaT) in people with Mycobacteroides abscessus pulmonary disease
T2 - a multicentre, randomised, multi-arm, adaptive platform trial
AU - Jong, Tiffany
AU - Baird, Timothy
AU - Barr, Helen Louise
AU - Bell, Scott
AU - Bigirumurame, Theophile
AU - Brady, Kara
AU - Burke, Andrew
AU - Byrnes, Joshua
AU - Caudri, Daan
AU - Clark, Julia E
AU - Coin, Lachlan J M
AU - Goh, Felicia
AU - Grimwood, Keith
AU - Hicks, Daniel
AU - Jayawardana, Kaushala
AU - Joshi, Sri
AU - Lee, Katherine
AU - Qvist, Tavs
AU - Reid, David
AU - Rice, Megan
AU - Roberts, Jason A
AU - Rogers, Geraint
AU - Shackleton, Claire
AU - Sly, Peter D
AU - Smyth, Alan R
AU - Stevens, Luke
AU - Stockwell, Rebecca
AU - Tarique, Abdullah
AU - Taylor, Steven
AU - Thomson, Rachel
AU - Tiddens, Harm A W M
AU - Wang, Xiao Fang
AU - Wason, James
AU - Wainwright, Claire
N1 - © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ Group.
PY - 2025/9/21
Y1 - 2025/9/21
N2 - INTRODUCTION: Mycobacteroides abscessus (MABS) is within the non-tuberculous mycobacteria family. It inhabits soil and water, exhibits multi-antibiotic resistance and causes opportunistic lung infections, which may progress to symptomatic MABS-pulmonary disease (MABS-PD) associated with substantial morbidity, increased healthcare utilisation, impaired quality of life and increased mortality. Treatment regimens for MABS-PD are highly variable, not evidence-based and involve complex, expensive drug combinations administered for prolonged periods (>12 months) with frequent adverse effects and treatment failure. There is an urgent need for safe, efficacious and cost-effective MABS-PD therapy. Here, we describe the Master Protocol for the Finding the Optimal Regimen for Mycobacteroides abscessus Treatment (FORMaT) trial. FORMaT aims to determine the most effective and best tolerated treatment for MABS-PD as defined by MABS clearance from respiratory samples with good treatment tolerance.METHODS AND ANALYSIS: FORMaT is an international multicentre, adaptive platform trial evaluating treatment combinations for MABS-PD. Participants are randomised multiple times during the trial, with assessment of the primary outcome of clearance of MABS infection with good treatment tolerance. Initially, therapies recommended in international consensus guidelines are being tested. Data obtained will eliminate therapies lacking efficacy or causing unacceptable toxicity. Novel treatments can then be added and tested against previously determined optimal approaches, leading in an iterative fashion to improved microbiological clearance and health outcomes. In parallel, an Observational cohort and several integrated and discovery studies are embedded in FORMaT to identify biomarkers of MABS-PD and MABS clearance, clinical and radiographic treatment response, drug pharmacokinetics and Mycobacteroides genomics and resistome.ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The FORMaT Master Protocol and related documents are approved by regulatory authorities in each participating jurisdiction and/or site. Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at scientific meetings. De-identified, aggregated data will be shared on an approved online platform.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: NCT04310930, ANZCTR12618001831279, 2020-000050-10, ISRCTN67303903.
AB - INTRODUCTION: Mycobacteroides abscessus (MABS) is within the non-tuberculous mycobacteria family. It inhabits soil and water, exhibits multi-antibiotic resistance and causes opportunistic lung infections, which may progress to symptomatic MABS-pulmonary disease (MABS-PD) associated with substantial morbidity, increased healthcare utilisation, impaired quality of life and increased mortality. Treatment regimens for MABS-PD are highly variable, not evidence-based and involve complex, expensive drug combinations administered for prolonged periods (>12 months) with frequent adverse effects and treatment failure. There is an urgent need for safe, efficacious and cost-effective MABS-PD therapy. Here, we describe the Master Protocol for the Finding the Optimal Regimen for Mycobacteroides abscessus Treatment (FORMaT) trial. FORMaT aims to determine the most effective and best tolerated treatment for MABS-PD as defined by MABS clearance from respiratory samples with good treatment tolerance.METHODS AND ANALYSIS: FORMaT is an international multicentre, adaptive platform trial evaluating treatment combinations for MABS-PD. Participants are randomised multiple times during the trial, with assessment of the primary outcome of clearance of MABS infection with good treatment tolerance. Initially, therapies recommended in international consensus guidelines are being tested. Data obtained will eliminate therapies lacking efficacy or causing unacceptable toxicity. Novel treatments can then be added and tested against previously determined optimal approaches, leading in an iterative fashion to improved microbiological clearance and health outcomes. In parallel, an Observational cohort and several integrated and discovery studies are embedded in FORMaT to identify biomarkers of MABS-PD and MABS clearance, clinical and radiographic treatment response, drug pharmacokinetics and Mycobacteroides genomics and resistome.ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The FORMaT Master Protocol and related documents are approved by regulatory authorities in each participating jurisdiction and/or site. Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at scientific meetings. De-identified, aggregated data will be shared on an approved online platform.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: NCT04310930, ANZCTR12618001831279, 2020-000050-10, ISRCTN67303903.
KW - Humans
KW - Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous/drug therapy
KW - Mycobacterium abscessus/drug effects
KW - Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use
KW - Multicenter Studies as Topic
KW - Lung Diseases/drug therapy
KW - Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
KW - Drug Therapy, Combination
KW - Quality of Life
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105016768202&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-096188
DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-096188
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 40976660
SN - 2044-6055
VL - 15
SP - e096188
JO - BMJ Open
JF - BMJ Open
IS - 9
M1 - e096188
ER -