Daily Nation Newspaper

INDIA TB: CAN VACCINES HELP INDIA TRIUMPH OVER TUBERCULOS­IS?

- BBC.

NEW DELHI - In 2018, India set for itself the lofty goal of eliminatin­g pulmonary tuberculos­is (TB) by 2025 - five years ahead of the deadline set by the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

In March 2023, Prime Minister Narendra Modi reiterated this commitment at the One World TB Summit, held in the northern city of Varanasi.

But the World Health Organisati­on’s (WHO’s) Global Tuberculos­is Report paints a different picture - every two minutes, one person dies of the disease in India.

According to the report, India accounted for the highest global TB burden, with 27 percent of the 10.6 million people diagnosed with the infection in 2022. The country is also home to 47 percent of people who developed multi-drug resistant infection which is unresponsi­ve or resistant to at least two of the first line of anti-TB drugs the same year.

While experts say testing and treatment remain the bestknown ways to tackle the disease, India has also invested in trying to find an effective TB vaccine - since 2019, scientists have been testing two vaccines in seven research centres.

But TB vaccines are not that easy to develop.

“We don’t know what exactly we want the vaccine to do. Until we have a fundamenta­l understand­ing of how humans do or do not resist the tubercle bacillus (TB bacteria), it is difficult to engineer a vaccine that capitalise­s on that knowledge,” says Dr Marcel A. Behr, director of infectious diseases division at Canada’s McGill University Health Centre.

Which means that so far, there is no clarity on whether a TB vaccine should induce antibodies, antigen-specific T-cells (combative cells generated by specific bacteria parts) or boost innate immunity.

Dr Behr adds that the quest for a vaccine has also been hampered because the test for TB cannot distinguis­h between a current and past infection the current test merely tells us that a person was infected with the bacteria and not whether the infection is ongoing or healed.

“Following people forward in time to learn who clears their infection and who does not is difficult when your test cannot distinguis­h between these outcomes,” Dr Behr adds.

Several patients face stigma associated with tuberculos­is.

But scientists at the government-backed Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) have been doing exactly this observing household contacts of TB patients for four years to determine whether they have developed TB - living with the infected increases the risk of getting the disease. If all goes well, the results of the trial will be out by March, ICMR researcher­s said.

The ICMR has been testing a recombinan­t BCG vaccine candidate named VPM1002 and a heat-killed suspension mycobacter­ium vaccine named Immuvac.

To put it simply, the first vaccine has the modified DNA of TB bacteria and the second is TB bacteria that have been killed by heat. If they prove effective, they could stimulate an immune response against TB.

The trial has three groups two have been given one dose of each of the vaccines, while the third has received a placebo. But the participan­ts - 12, 000 people above the age of six years - don’t know which treatment they have received.

“The vaccine efficacy study aims to reduce the incidence of TB among household contacts,” says Dr Banu Rekha, who is leading the trial at ICMR’s National Institute for Research in Tuberculos­is, Chennai.

Some experts, such as Dr Behr, think the trial may have gone on too long. In a high transmissi­on setting in which several people have active or latent TB, a successful vaccine “should demonstrat­e efficacy” in one to two years, he says.

There are other challenges too.

For a TB vaccine to be effective, first it should work, and secondly, shots will have to be administer­ed to almost all of India’s population.

“Millions in India live with latent TB,” says Chapal Mehra, a public health specialist. Latent TB patients are infected with the disease but do not have any symptoms.

Experts also point out that a 17-year-long BCG vaccine trial held between 1968 and 1987 - involving more than 280, 000 people in Tamil Nadu state - ended with disappoint­ing results.

“BCG did not offer any protection against adult form of bacillary pulmonary TB,” according to a 1999 report on the trial.

There cannot be a one-stop solution for TB, experts say, because it is a “complicate­d disease” that has social, economic and behavioura­l contributo­ry factors.

“Why is TB often called a poor person’s disease? A poor person who can only afford poor housing and bad nutrition is more susceptibl­e to contractin­g TB. To eliminate TB, the disease and its contributo­ry factors have to be understood holistical­ly,” Mehra says.

India has a comprehens­ive DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course) programme recommende­d by the WHO under which people detected with TB can get treated for free in government health facilities.

But public hospitals are stretched and sometimes ineffectiv­e, forcing tens of thousands of TB patients to turn to private health providers.

There are other challenges - in 2020 and 2021, the federal government gave 20 billion rupees ($240m) to 7.5 million TB patients for treatment through a direct benefit transfer programme. But experts say the monthly figure per patient is too small to make a meaningful impact.

Nutrition experts also say that providing good nutrition to the contacts of those with TB significan­tly reduces the incidence of the disease.

In a recent study published by Lancet, Madhavi Bhargava and Anurag Bhargava wrote that good nutrition reduced all forms of TB by 40 percent and infectious TB by 50 percent in contacts of patients they observed over six months.

“An effective TB vaccine is critical in decreasing the TB burden. But it would be desirable to see vaccinatio­n and nutritiona­l improvemen­ts as complement­ary interventi­ons,” said Dr Madhavi Bhargava, a public health specialist,

Ideally, Dr Behr says, the world needs a three-pronged TB eliminatio­n system - which includes optimised testing and treatment, maximised nutrition and a vaccine which “not only prevents the disease but also blocks transmissi­on.”

 ?? ?? India has set a goal to eliminate TB by 2025.
India has set a goal to eliminate TB by 2025.
 ?? ?? Several patients face stigma associated with tuberculos­is.
Several patients face stigma associated with tuberculos­is.

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