City
Epaper

New, shorter drug-resistant tuberculosis treatment shows promise

By IANS | Updated: November 20, 2023 18:30 IST

Paris, Nov 20 New, shorter drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) treatment -- BPaL (comprised of bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid) -- ...

Open in App

Paris, Nov 20 New, shorter drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) treatment -- BPaL (comprised of bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid) -- showed a 94.5 per cent cure rate in countries with a high burden of drug-resistant TB (DR-TB), reveals interim research results from five Central and Southeast Asian countries.

Tuberculosis is one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases, killing 1.3 million people in 2022 and requiring at least four to six months of treatment with drugs that are decades old.

Drug-resistant TB is a growing threat -- about 410,000 people had multidrug-resistant TB infections in 2022, but only about 43 per cent received treatment.

The BPaL regimen reduces the length of treatment for DR-TB from 18 months or longer to six months, and projects to be more cost-effective than previous therapies. Simpler and more cost-effective therapies can help alleviate some of the burdens that contribute to people with DR-TB going untreated.

The findings from Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan, Philippines, Uzbekistan, and Vietnam presented together at the 2023 Union World Conference on Lung Health in Paris, represent outcomes for 319 out of 576 participants. These participants completed treatment with BPaL and were confirmed TB-free six months after completion of therapy.

“The BPaL regimen, we have seen treatment times decrease from 9-18 months to six, and we’re seeing early signs of high cure rates compared to about 63 per cent cure with longer regimens,” said Iana Terleieva, Head of the Tuberculosis Control and Prevention, Department of the State Institution, Public Health Center of the Ministry of Health of Ukraine.

“Even with added challenges as seen through a wartime lens in Ukraine, this shorter, simplified regimen has already made an impact for the treatment of DR-TB. We are hard at work continuing to expand access to the regimen throughout the country, so it can be made available to all who need it.”

In addition, four abstracts from operational research in the Philippines -- the second country to launch OR -- were presented at the Union Conference. These abstracts showed the BPaL regimen’s overall success rate against some of the hardest-to-cure strains of TB in the Philippines was 97 per cent. The regimen presented few serious adverse events.

“In the Philippines, the BPaL regimen has exceeded all expectations,” said Dr. Irene Flores, principal investigator at the Jose B. Lingad Memorial General Hospital in the Philippines. “With access to new technologies like BPaL, we can see a day in the near future where we will no longer be a country with a high-burden of drug-resistant TB cases.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalJammu on High Alert: CM Omar Abdullah Urges Citizens to Stay Indoors as Union Territory Faces Blackout Amid Attacks

NationalWater from HNSS project to be released in July: Andhra Pradesh CM

Other SportsNeeraj Chopra Classic 2025 postponed in light of India-Pakistan tension

BusinessIndian carriers cancel flights to 24 airports till May 15 as tensions flare up

NationalIndian carriers cancel flights to 24 airports till May 15 as tensions flare up

International Realted Stories

InternationalIf this escalates further, nobody wins: UK Foreign Secy after speaking with EAM Jaishankar, Pak Foreign Minister

InternationalXi, Putin reach many new, important common understandings: Chinese Foreign Ministry

InternationalJaishankar thanks Russia for expressing solidarity with India amid tensions with Pakistan

InternationalRakhine Corridor — Yunus regime sacrificing Bangladesh's sovereignty

InternationalSingapore express "grave concern"; calls for de-escalation amid India-Pakistan tensions