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July 2014 TB DRUG RESISTANCE SIGNIFIES FAILURE Multi-drug resistant and extensively drug resistant tuberculosis are exposing the inadequacies of TB control programmes.
LONDON (IRIN) – Tuberculosis control programmes are among the oldest
public health campaigns (dating back 125 years) but are not nearly
as successful as they should be. Despite effective drugs having been
available for over 50 years, TB still kills a million people a year,
making it the world's single deadliest infectious disease after AIDS. Even more discouragingly, it is by no means clear that the 45% reduction is the result of national and international TB control programmes. TB had already ceased to be a threat in most of Europe and North America by the 1960s, before the development of effective drugs. When people are better housed, better fed, and generally enjoy a more satisfactory standard of living, TB tends to fade away. A new report by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) points out that the reduction in TB correlates far more closely with a country's score on the Human Development Index than it does with the intensity of the effort it puts into disease control.
The report puts its finger on what it calls a lack of focus by those
working on the disease. Part of the problem, it says, is a tendency
to think of TB as a kind of “background noise”, something which is
always there and attracts no particular sense of urgency. There has
also been a failure to understand the way in which the disease is
concentrated in certain vulnerable populations, and to act accordingly.
Encouraging national figures for the incidence of TB can conceal pockets
of much higher infection rates. Need to actively seek out cases So one message of the report is that it is no use just creating TB clinics and waiting for people to turn up. You have to go out into those high-incidence pockets – which may be among migrants or prisoners, or the homeless or indigenous people – and actively seek out cases. The people most likely to be infected are those least likely to come looking for health care. It is estimated that a third of cases of active TB are never diagnosed or treated. A pioneering “cough monitor” project in Kenya's Rift Valley, where rates are high, has been testing around 2,000 people a year: 16% tested positive for TB. Using village health workers in Ethiopia to test people with persistent coughs doubled the detection rate for the disease.
Detection rates among children are even lower. Their disease is harder
to diagnose by the most common testing methods, and workers with a
public health focus tend to overlook children, assuming that they
are less likely to be a source of infection. Scientists at the University
of Sheffield have done some complicated analysis of the data, and reckon that high-burden countries
only detect one third of the children with active TB. Their report suggests that childhood TB could be greatly reduced if you gave preventative therapy with isoniazid, one of the most basic of TB drugs, to all children under the age of 15 who are living with an actively infectious patient (an estimated 15 million children worldwide). “With TB, if you don't keep a lid on it, it will come back and it will come back hard.” The lead author, Peter Dodd, says getting good figures is also important in its own right. “Quantifying the burden of TB in children is important,” he says, “because without good numbers, there can be no targets for improvement, no monitoring of trends and there is a lack of evidence to encourage industry to invest in developing medicines or diagnostics that are more appropriate for children than those available today.”
Most of the EIU’s recommendations are about using existing tools and systems more effectively. After all, despite the spread of resistant strains, 85% of TB cases are still curable with basic, first line drugs. New tools
“Every patient will need to be treated for 4-6 months, and then the follow-up period is the time when, having apparently successfully treated someone, you see whether they relapse afterwards or not. And you need a minimum of 12 months after the last patient being treated, to see whether or not those patients are going to relapse and therefore have an unfavourable outcome. We need to know, are there dormant organisms which are going to raise their head? So it's a real challenge, and I think TB is more challenging than many other areas.” – Third World Network Features. -ends-
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