Bangkok Post

Millions with high blood sugar risk TB

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Millions of people with high blood sugar may be at greater risk of tuberculos­is than previously thought, scientists said recently, warning that diabetes and TB could combine to create the “perfect storm” of disease.

Tuberculos­is, a severe infection caused by bacteria in the lungs, kills almost as many people each year as HIV/Aids and malaria combined.

In 2017 nearly 10 million people developed TB, according to the World Health Organizati­on, and experts are concerned that a global explosion in diabetes will put millions more at risk.

New research unveiled this week at a global lung health conference in The Hague also suggests further cause for worry.

For the study, scientists at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine conducted blood tests on people living with tuberculos­is and diabetes in four countries: South Africa, Romania, Indonesia and Peru.

They then tested people with TB and blood sugar levels that were high, but below the threshold for diabetes.

They found that blood samples from those who did not have diabetes still contained molecules associated with people suffering from TB/diabetes.

“This tells us even before a person develops diabetes, the risk of developing TB is higher,” said Ajay Kumar, a research director at The Internatio­nal Union Against Tuberculos­is and Lung Disease, who was not involved in the study.

In some countries such as India, home to roughly a quarter of all tuberculos­is cases, anyone found to be carrying TB must automatica­lly be screened for diabetes, and vice versa.

Kumar said the study showed that countries should also check patients with high blood sugar for TB. He said “millions” of people with elevated blood sugar could be at additional risk.

The link between diabetes and tuberculos­is is known, though poorly understood. Diabetes slows the body’s natural defences, allowing TB the chance to develop.

While TB infections and deaths have declined slightly in the last decade, type II diabetes has exploded. Roughly one in four people on Earth carry the TB bacteria in their bodies, and more than 450 million people are type II diabetic.

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