| Literature DB >> 26409271 |
Marco Schito1, Giovanni Battista Migliori2, Helen A Fletcher3, Ruth McNerney4, Rosella Centis2, Lia D'Ambrosio2, Matthew Bates5, Gibson Kibiki6, Nathan Kapata5, Tumena Corrah7, Jamshed Bomanji8, Cris Vilaplana9, Daniel Johnson10, Peter Mwaba5, Markus Maeurer11, Alimuddin Zumla12.
Abstract
Despite concerted efforts over the past 2 decades at developing new diagnostics, drugs, and vaccines with expanding pipelines, tuberculosis remains a global emergency. Several novel diagnostic technologies show promise of better point-of-care rapid tests for tuberculosis including nucleic acid-based amplification tests, imaging, and breath analysis of volatile organic compounds. Advances in new and repurposed drugs for use in multidrug-resistant (MDR) or extensively drug-resistant (XDR) tuberculosis have focused on development of several new drug regimens and their evaluation in clinical trials and now influence World Health Organization guidelines. Since the failure of the MVA85A vaccine 2 years ago, there have been no new tuberculosis vaccine candidates entering clinical testing. The current status quo of the lengthy treatment duration and poor treatment outcomes associated with MDR/XDR tuberculosis and with comorbidity of tuberculosis with human immunodeficiency virus and noncommunicable diseases is unacceptable. New innovations and political and funder commitment for early rapid diagnosis, shortening duration of therapy, improving treatment outcomes, and prevention are urgently required.Entities:
Keywords: diagnostics; drugs; management; tuberculosis; vaccines
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26409271 PMCID: PMC4583570 DOI: 10.1093/cid/civ609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079