Imperial Valley Press

FDA approves TB pill that cures more hard-to-treat patients

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TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — U.S. regulators Wednesday approved a new tuberculos­is medicine that shortens and improves treatment for the hardest-to-treat cases, a worsening problem in many poor countries.

It’s the first TB drug from a nonprofit group, the TB Alliance. Formed to come up with better treatments, the group developed pretomanid with help from charities and government agencies.

The pill was approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for use with two other antibiotic­s. Decades of incomplete or ine ective treatment has resulted in TB strains that have become drug resistant and aren’t killed by long-standard medicines.

In a key study, the three-pill combo cured about 90% of patients with very drug-resistant TB, usually within 6 months. Patients also infected with HIV, a common situation, fared as well as the other study participan­ts. Pretomanid also appears to stop patients from spreading the deadly bacterial infection after just a few days’ treatment.

Until now, the best option cured about twothirds of patients, took 18 to 30 months and required up to eight kinds of shots and pills. Many patients die or don’t finish treatment, according to TB Alliance CEO Mel Spigelman.

Worldwide, TB kills about 1.6 million people annually. It spreads through droplets when someone sick with TB sneezes or coughs. TB attacks the lungs and sometimes other organs.

Pretomanid was approved for use with Zyvox and Sirturo, two other antibiotic­s used for the toughest cases. The three drugs, which have little known resistance, attack tuberculos­is in di erent ways. Potential side effects include liver damage, nerve pain and an irregular heartbeat.

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