By Eric Akasa
Drawing on recent findings of a significant rise in cases of drug-resistant tuberculosis in the UK and globally, top TB researchers at a briefing today in London called for greater focus on the quest for new vaccines-a crucial long-term, cost-effective method for addressing the growing threat.
The
event at the Science Media Centre follows the release of troubling new research
published in The Lancet in August suggesting that levels of
drug-resistant TB are higher than previously appreciated, leaving few options
for patients with drug-resistant TB. TB is already the world’s second leading
infectious killer. The WHO estimates that 9 percent of cases of
multidrug-resistant TB in fact have extensively drug-resistant TB for which
even fewer drugs are effective, and The Lancet study revealed that
rates of XDR-TB ranged from 0.8-15.2% of MDR-TB cases at study sites across the
world.
“Vaccines
are the ultimate long-term, cost-effective solution for addressing
tuberculosis,” said Helen McShane, PhD, Professor of Vaccinology, University of Oxford, and developer of the vaccine
candidate that is furthest along in clinical trials. “It is important that we
continue to develop better drugs and diagnostics to help us rapidly diagnose TB
and identify drug-resistant strains, but we must invest in vaccine research now
if our ultimate goal is to be able to prevent the disease rather than forever
chase growing drug resistance with new drugs.”
McShane
was joined at the London
briefing by Ann Ginsberg, MD, PhD, Vice President of Scientific Affairs at
Aeras and Tim McHugh, PhD, Professor of Medical Microbiology, University
College London. The three scientists are working on the frontlines of efforts
to combat the disease, which killed an estimated 1.45 million people in
2010—the equivalent of the populations Birmingham
and Liverpool combined.
In
the last decade, Ginsberg said, TB vaccine research has made dramatic strides.
The number of TB vaccines in clinical trials has grown from zero to more than a
dozen. MVA85A, the vaccine developed in McShane’s laboratory, is the most
clinically-advanced TB vaccine candidate in the world. The first efficacy
results are expected early next year based on the outcome of a clinical trial
in South Africa,
carried out at the South African Tuberculosis Vaccine Initiative with support
from Aeras, The Wellcome Trust, the European Commission, Emergent BioSolutions
and the Oxford-Emergent Tuberculosis Consortium.
“Vaccines
that prevent adolescents and adults from developing infectious tuberculosis
would be the single greatest advance in the global fight against the disease,”
said Ginsberg. “Much of the most exciting TB vaccine discovery work is
happening in the United Kingdom
and Europe with significant leadership and support from the UK government.”
UK and Global TB Trends
More
than half of all reported TB cases are in Asia, most of them in India, Pakistan,
China and Indonesia. South Africa has the highest rate in Africa, which accounts for 26 percent of the burden of
disease globally.
In
2011, the incidence rate in the UK
rose 6.6% over the previous year and London,
which is home to almost 40 percent of all cases in the UK according to a report released in July by the
Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology, has been dubbed the “TB Capital
of Western Europe.”
Globally,
drug resistance has grown because of misuse of anti-TB drugs, poor management
of the disease and transmission of drug-resistant cases from person to person;
and the impact of the disease on health systems and national economies is only
beginning to be felt, McHugh said. In the UK, the total number of cases of
drug-resistant TB has risen by more than 50 percent in the last decade.
“Treatment
for MDR-TB is more expensive than for drug-susceptible TB, and is protracted
lasting up to two years, the drugs used are unpleasant with significant side
effects” McHugh said. “In many settings, clinicians are unable to diagnose
MDR-TB rapidly, increasing the risk of patients spreading the drug resistant
strains while receiving treatment that may be ineffective against the
infection.”
Studies
regarding MDR-TB, such as the one published in The Lancet on August
30, confirmed what researchers have been seeing in their laboratories and
clinics.
“The
development of new treatments and diagnostics are vital for treatment of
individuals infected with drug-resistant strains of TB,” McHugh said. “But
drugs alone will not control the spread of TB and investments in vaccines are
essential to protect the wider community.”
Once
known as “consumption” for the slow wasting away of people who die from it,
tuberculosis is one of history’s great global killers. One out of every three
people globally is thought to be infected by the airborne TB organism, although
a much smaller number will go on to develop the disease.
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