Amina Jindani
Clinical trialist (born 1936)
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Amina Jindani FRCP, is a leading clinical trialist, who has spent forty years conducting randomised controlled trials seeking to improve the treatment of drug-susceptible tuberculosis.
She was coordinator of clinical trials at the MRC Tuberculosis and Chest Diseases Unit, London, and the East African Tuberculosis Investigation Centre (1967–77).[1] Over this period, the MRC undertook a series of clinical trials that developed modern short course treatment regimens for drug susceptible tuberculosis.[1][2]
She then held positions at the Department of Preventive Medicine and Biostatistics, University of Toronto (1977–80), and the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, Paris (1997–2004).[1]
She is currently Emeritus Professor of Tuberculosis Therapeutics at City St George's, University of London.[3]
Early life
Jindani was born in Zanzibar in 1936, moved to the UK aged 15, and studied medicine at the University of London.[4]
Doctoral research
Study A
Jindani was chief investigator of Study A, a randomised controlled trial testing two 8-month regimens (one recommended in international guidelines at the time) against the current gold standard 6-month regimen for the treatment of newly diagnosed drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis. The shorter regimen used rifampicin (rather than ethambutol) alongside the isoniazid during the 'continuation phase'.
Between 1998 and 2004, the trial enrolled 1,355 patients from eight centres in both Africa and Asia. It was the first TB trial to use a non-inferiority design. The trial clearly demonstrated that an 8 month regimen, then recommended in World Health Organisation guidelines, was inferior to the current six month regimen.[7][8]
Study A was the key evidence supporting 2010 changes to the World Health Organisation's tuberculosis treatment guidelines, changes estimated to have prevented 100,000s of relapses and treatment failures per year.[9][10]
Other work
Jindani's other major trials include RIFAQUIN, RIFATOX and RIFASHORT.[11][12][13] These trials all focused on use of high dose rifamycin in treatment regimens for drug susceptible tuberculosis. Prof Jindani's collaborators included Donald Enarson, Andrew Nunn and Denis Mitchison.
Personal life
Jindani married lawyer Mohamed Keshavjee in 1977.
Recognition
Jindani was elected Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians (London) in 2003.[14] She was awarded the Ibn Sina Award for Medicine in 2018.[15] In 2019, she was awarded the Princess Chichibu Memorial Global TB Prize, which is awarded annually by the Japan Anti-Tuberculosis Association to 'A person who has made internationally recognized achievements in scientific research on tuberculosis or tuberculosis control'.[16] More recently, Jindani was named City St George's Extraordinary Woman 2025.[4]