| Literature DB >> 26889711 |
Timothy Sullivan, Yanis Ben Amor.
Abstract
New treatments for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB) are urgently needed. Two new drugs, bedaquiline and delamanid, have recently been released, and several new drugs and treatment regimens are in the pipeline. Misuse of TB drugs is a principal cause of drug resistance. As new drugs and regimens reach the market, the need to make them available to patients must be balanced with regulation of their use so that resistance to the new drugs can be prevented. To foster the rational use of new drugs, we propose 1) expanding/strengthening the capacity for drug susceptibility testing, beginning with countries with a high TB burden; 2) regulating prescribing practices by banning over-the-counter sale of TB drugs and enacting an accreditation system whereby providers must be certified to prescribe new drugs; and 3) decentralizing MDR TB care in rural communities by employing trained community health workers, using promising mobile technologies, and enlisting the aid of civil society organizations.Entities:
Keywords: MDR TB; MDR TB drugs; XDR TB; antimicrobial resistance; bacteria; extensively drug resistant TB; global introduction; multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; tuberculosis and other mycobacteria
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26889711 PMCID: PMC4766896 DOI: 10.3201/eid2203.151228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Suggested plan for ensuring the appropriate use of new TB drugs and regimens*
| Goals | Support | Feasibility/precedent |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Improve DST in high-TB-burden countries | ||
| A. Increase number of laboratories performing TB culture and DST | Key goal of WHO ( | Ongoing global scale-up of DST during 2006–2015. EXPAND-TB project has improved technology in 97 TB laboratories worldwide ( |
| B. Improve TB diagnostic technology in existing laboratories, including rollout of molecular diagnostics | WHO, NTPs | >3,000 GeneXpert machines procured at concessional prices since WHO recommended use in 2010 ( |
| C. Develop a specimen bank of TB strains resistant to new antibiotics | WHO, private sector (both diagnostic and pharmaceutical companies) | TDR TB strain bank launched by Special Program for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases |
| 2. Improve prescribing practices in high TB burden countries | ||
| A. Establish accreditation process for prescribers of new TB drugs | National governments, NTPs, pharmaceutical companies | Similar programs instituted for laboratory services in low-resource settings ( |
| B. Ban over-the-counter sale of TB drugs | Widely supported by many NGOs and other authorities ( | Common practice in many countries; new regulations instituted in India in 2014 |
| 3. Support community-based treatment of MDR TB | ||
| A. Employ community health workers to assist with MDR TB treatment | Supported by WHO ( | Beneficial role of CHWs in TB care well described ( |
| B. Use emerging mobile technologies to monitor for adherence and adverse effects | WHO recently acknowledged value of mobile health technology ( | Well-studied for HIV care; data for use in TB management emerging ( |
| C. Enlist support of existing civil society organizations | Wide support on global, national, and local level | Many such organizations already invested in improving TB care |
*TB, tuberculosis; DST, drug-susceptibility testing; WHO, World Health Organization; FIND, Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics; GLI, Global Laboratory Initiative; EXPAND-TB, Expanding Access to New Diagnostics for TB; NTPs, national TB programs; TDR TB, totally drug-resistant TB; MDR TB, multidrug-resistant TB; NGOs, nongovernmental organizations; CHWs, community health workers.