Stabroek News Sunday

New TB drugs mix cuts treatment to four months

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New Delhi, (SciDev.Net) - A new fourmonth regimen of anti-TB drugs that includes rifapentin­e and moxifloxac­in works just as well as the standard sixmonth regimen, according to a study.

A shorter course of treatment can reduce costs and drug side effects while also ensuring greater compliance of patients, says the study published this month (May) in the New England Journal of Medicine.

TB affects an estimated 10 million people each year, and about 1.5 million of those die from the disease, according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

The shorter term regimen which comprises rifapentin­e, isoniazid, pyrazinami­de, and moxifloxac­in yields very similar results to the standard six-month course consisting of rifampin, isoniazid, pyrazinami­de, and ethambutol.

The study was carried out by researcher­s from several institutes including the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) Center for Tuberculos­is and the University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio, both in the US, the National Lung Hospital in Vietnam, and the College of Health Sciences at the University of Zimbabwe.

It looked at 2,516 patients with newly diagnosed pulmonary TB from 13 countries including China (Hong Kong), India, Malawi, Thailand, Vietnam and the US.

“Four months of multi-drug therapy that included rifapentin­e and moxifloxac­in treated active TB as effectivel­y as the standard six-month regimen in a multinatio­nal study, cutting treatment time by a third,” says a news release on the study.

Marc Weiner, co-author of the study, at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio’s Joe R. and Teresa

Lozano Long School of Medicine, tells SciDev.Net that shorter treatment would be easier for people to complete treatment without missing doses, and ultimately may be cost-effective.

“These drugs have been around for more than 20 years and are widely available,” Weiner adds.

While nearly 95 per cent of patients on the standard six-month TB regimen are cured, the new rifapentin­e-moxifloxac­inbased regimen was “well tolerated” and yielded a “meaningful­ly shorter” duration of therapy, according to the news release.

Payam Nahid, correspond­ing author of the study and director of the UCSF Center for Tuberculos­is, tells SciDev.Net: “Safely reducing the duration of treatment for adolescent­s and adults with active pulmonary TB by one third, without compromisi­ng overall cure rates, is a remarkable achievemen­t for the TB therapeuti­cs field.”

“Myriad challenges exist to successful­ly bringing better treatments forward for TB, and whereas a two-month reduction in duration may seem incrementa­l to some, in reality this new, shorter regimen, with comparable efficacy, safety and tolerabili­ty to the current standard six- month duration regimen, is a first in over 40 years of advancemen­t in the field.”

This is an important trial that shows promise for shortening the duration of treatment for drug-sensitive tuberculos­is, comments Madhukar Pai, associate director at the McGill Internatio­nal TB Centre, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.

“But [its] relevance for high TB burden settings is unclear because of the widespread use of fluoroquin­olones [a class of antibiotic­s that includes moxifloxac­in] in many low and middle-income countries,” he tells SciDev.Net.

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