Cape Times

NGO calls for cheaper TB drugs

- Lisa Isaacs

WITH the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) updated recommenda­tions for improved drug-resistant tuberculos­is (DR-TB) treatment, prioritisi­ng the use of several oral drugs including bedaquilin­e, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has called on producers to make the drug more affordable.

The internatio­nal medical humanitari­an organisati­on welcomed the WHO recommenda­tions, and said the newly recommende­d 18- to 20-month treatment regimen could help improve cure rates, decrease mortality and have far fewer side effects.

But for the recommenda­tions to be put in place and for many more people with DR-TB to receive treatment, MSF called on US pharmaceut­ical corporatio­n Johnson and Johnson (J&J) to take immediate steps to make the drug affordable, in particular in low- and middle-income and high DR-TB burden countries.

MSF says only 20% of people with DR-TB globally receive the treatment they need.

Although J&J recently announced a price reduction for bedaquilin­e in some countries, it falls short in making the drug affordable in countries that are hardest hit by DR-TB.

The reduced price of almost R6000 for six months of treatment that certain countries are promised remains excessive, says MSF.

In countries excluded from J&J’s price reduction, the corporatio­n charges between about R43 000 and close to R500 000 for six months of treatment.

To facilitate treatment scaleup, MSF has called for a full DR-TB treatment regimen to be priced no higher than around R7200. MSF also supports the call from HIV and TB activists asking J&J to cut the price of bedaquilin­e to $32 (R468) a month or $192 for six months, across all low- and middle-income and high DR-TB burden countries.

“Government­s and treatment providers should urgently make sure people can access optimal treatments, including bedaquilin­e,” said MSF’s internatio­nal medical secretary Dr Mercedes Tatay.

To ensure the long-term affordabil­ity and sustainabl­e supply of bedaquilin­e, which is patented quite widely until 2023, MSF called on J&J to also issue a licence to the Medicines Patent Pool, which would enable access to affordable generic versions of the drug.

High TB burden countries should also consider issuing a “government use” licence for bedaquilin­e to encourage pricelower­ing competitio­n among generic producers, before the patent expires.

MSF additional­ly urged J&J and its Russian partner Pharmstand­ard, responsibl­e for supply in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, to work swiftly to register the drug, particular­ly in the 10 out of 30 high DR-TB burden countries where it remains unregister­ed.

The WHO deputy director-general for programmes, Dr Soumya Swaminatha­n, said the treatment landscape for patients with multidrugr­esistant TB (MDR-TB) would be dramatical­ly transforme­d for the better.

“Building on the available new data, and with the involvemen­t of a large number of stakeholde­rs, WHO has moved forward in rapidly reviewing the evidence and communicat­ing the key changes needed to improve the chances of survival of MDR-TB patients worldwide. Political momentum now needs to urgently accelerate,” Swaminatha­n said.

 ?? Picture: Alexis Huguet ?? BEST PRACTICE: Nontobeko Magagula, Ministry of Health Cough Officer, counsels a patient suspected to have TB, in the TB screening department of the Doctors Without Borders Matsapha Clinic in the Manzini Region, Swaziland.
Picture: Alexis Huguet BEST PRACTICE: Nontobeko Magagula, Ministry of Health Cough Officer, counsels a patient suspected to have TB, in the TB screening department of the Doctors Without Borders Matsapha Clinic in the Manzini Region, Swaziland.

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