Drug-resistant strains of TB are out of control, warn health experts

The fight against new, antibiotic-resistant strains of tuberculosis has already been lost in some parts of the world, according to a senior World Health Organisation expert. Figures show a 5% rise in the number of new cases of the highly infectious disease in the UK.

Dr Paul Nunn, head of the WHO’s global TB response team, is leading the efforts against multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB). Nunn said that, while TB is preventable and curable, a combination of bad management and misdiagnosis was leaving pharmaceutical companies struggling to keep up. Meanwhile, the disease kills millions every year.

“It occurs basically when the health system screws up,” said Nunn. “Treating TB requires a carefully followed regime of medication over six months. In places where health services are fragmented or underfunded, or patients poor and health professionals ill-trained, that treatment can fall short, which can in turn lead to patients developing drug-resistant strains. It’s been estimated that an undiagnosed TB-infected person can infect 10 others a year.

“There’s a vicious circle, because when new drugs come out they are expensive, so there is no demand. Without the volume of demand, the cost will not come down. If we can’t tackle this, we are going to finish up with a lot more people being diagnosed with multi-drug resistant strains. We’ve already lost the battle in places such as the former Soviet Union, and so we need a huge expansion of effort, especially in places like India and China.” He added: “In some areas we have probably already lost the battle. Globally, it is still just 5% of the total number of TB cases, but with sloppy management of treatment we are moving towards an accelerating problem.”

Tuberculosis is long thought to have lost out as donors preferred to fund HIV research and healthcare for children. “The absolute numbers were seen to be falling and TB seemed somehow to lose out and never had the profile of other health issues; it was the orphan child and just didn’t get the same funding,” said Nunn. But while there were few drugs on the horizon, new rapid diagnostic tests were a “wonderful” breakthrough.

Anti-tuberculosis (TB) drug resistance is a major public health problem that threatens progress made in TB care and control worldwide. Drug resistance arises due to improper use of antibiotics in chemotherapy of drug-susceptible TB patients. This improper use is a result of a number of actions including, administration of improper treatment regimens and failure to ensure that patients complete the whole course of treatment. Essentially, drug resistance arises in areas with weak TB control programmes. A patient who develops active disease with a drug-resistant TB strain can transmit this form of TB to other individuals.

It is 130 years since the German scientist Dr Robert Koch astounded the world by announcing that he had discovered the cause of tuberculosis, the TB bacillus. At the time TB was raging through Europe and the Americas, killing one in seven people. Today tuberculosis remains an epidemic in much of the world, causing the deaths of several million people each year, most of them in developing countries. The combination of HIV and TB has proved catastrophic. More than 350,000 people living with HIV died because of TB in 2010.

Tuberculosis: Myths v. Fact
Myth: Tuberculosis is hereditary. 
Fact: Tuberculosis is NOT hereditary. It is a disease that is transmitted from
person to person through the air during coughing, sneezing, laughing, singing,
shouting, and even talking. When a person coughs or sneezes, the tiny germs
enter the air where they can be inhaled by those around them.

Myth: If someone coughs I will automatically develop TB. 
Fact: TB is not easily caught. You have to be in close contact with someone
who has TB for a long time (usually many hours or days).  You should be aware
of the symptoms of the disease so you can seek treatment as soon as possible.

Myth: Tuberculosis causes lung cancer.
Fact: Lung diseases that cause scarring of the lung tissues, such as
tuberculosis, can increase the risk of developing lung cancer. There are many
causes of lung cancer, with smoking being the number one cause. Radon,
asbestos, pollution, and many other materials and chemicals have been known
to cause lung cancer. 

Myth: Tuberculosis disease and Tuberculosis infection mean the same thing.
Fact: There are two types of tuberculosis: Tuberculosis Disease and
Tuberculosis Infection. A person infected with a tuberculosis infection is NOT
contagious because the germ is inactive or latent. The person does not know
he or she is infected because no signs or symptoms are experienced. A person
with tuberculosis disease is affected quite differently. The person with active
tuberculosis disease has the active germ within their body; therefore the person
is contagious and may be experiencing signs and symptoms.

Myth: Tuberculosis infection always develops into Tuberculosis Disease.
Fact: A tuberculosis infection does not always develop into tuberculosis
disease. People with weakened immune systems, such as the very young and
very old, persons with cancer or HIV infection are more likely to develop active
disease once infected. 

TB was once the biggest killer in Britain, but cases are now concentrated in London and among people not born in the UK. Provisional figures from the Health Protection Agency showed there were 9,042 new cases in 2011, compared with 8,587 in 2010. But Professor Ibrahim Abubakar, head of the TB section at the HPA, cautioned: “Despite the observed increase in TB cases in 2011, this provisional data should be interpreted with caution, because numbers are likely to change due to late notifications and de-notification of cases. It is therefore too early to determine whether this is a return to the upward trend of cases seen in the past two decades in the UK. TB continues to disproportionately affect those in hard to reach and vulnerable groups, particularly migrants, so it is crucial that we have specific strategies in place to address this.”

The UK is also under pressure to restore funding to the Global Fund, first established to tackle what is often called the “big three” of HIV, malaria and TB. A $1.7bn (£1bn) reduction in funding to tackle TB over the next five years will affect the treatment of 3.4 million TB patients and could reverse gains made in tackling the disease, says new evidence released by three charities.

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