Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

IIT-B drug to help cure TB?

- Musab Qazi musab.qazi@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: With resistance to convention­al drugs providing to be a major hurdle in fighting tuberculos­is (TB), researcher­s at the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay (IIT-B) have developed a new drug that they say could help combat the disease.

According to their study, which was published in a journal, Frontiers in Microbiolo­gy, in 2017, combining Rifampicin, a commonly used antibiotic, with cumene hydroperox­ide (CHP), a compound that itself doesn’t have antibiotic properties, enhances the efficacy of the drug against Mycobacter­ium tuberculos­is, which is responsibl­e for the disease. It can also reduce the dosage of the drug, limiting its side effects, states the study by Yesha Patel and Sarika Mehra, faculty members at IIT-B’S department of chemical engineerin­g.

“Many of the existing drugs are ineffectiv­e against the wide- spread drug-resistant strains of mycobacter­ium,” said Mehra.

The Centre’s data states that in 2018, 55,450 people were diagnosed with multi-drug resistant (MDR)-TB across the country, with 7,185 from Maharashtr­a.

I n MDR c a s e s , b a c t e r i a develop resistance to Isoniazid and Rifampicin, the two most powerful anti-tb drugs. Drug resistance is a result of incomplete and incorrect treatment or getting i nfected by a strain which is already resistant to many drugs.

The scientists tested the combinatio­n of drugs on Mycobacter­ium smegmatis and Mycobacter­ium bovis BCG, close cousins of the TB bacterium.

CHP, the combinatio­n drug used by researcher­s, was found t o hel p i n t he r upture and deat h o f t he c e l l s o f t hese bacteria.

They found that when used alongside CHP, Rifampicin was readily taken in by the cells, enabling them to use smaller doses of the antibiotic.

“The combinatio­n therapy is synergisti­c, meaning it reduces the amount of the antibiotic required even for regular (drugs e nsi t i ve) bact e r i a , ” said Mehra.

However, the method can’t yet be used by doctors.

“The research is merely proof of a concept. While CHP proved to be helpful, it’s a toxic product and can’t be used in a clinic. We a r e now r e s e a r c hi ng wit h another product which has similar properties as CHP, but is approved by Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA). The combinatio­n will be tested on actual TB bacteria, followed by clinical research,” said Mehra.

Mehra said that in addition to t he c ombination t herapy, researcher­s should also explore repurposin­g existing drugs, which are used for other diseases, for the treatment.

“I t t a k e s a l o n g t i me t o develop a new drug. Instead, it’s more practical to explore existing drugs,” she said.

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