Alarming Scale Of Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis
Alarming Scale Of Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis
Requires Rapid Response To Avert Emerging Global Crisis
SYDNEY, 20/03/2012 –
Alarming new data suggest that the global scope of
multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is much more vast
than previously estimated, requiring a concerted
international effort to combat this deadlier form of the
disease, the medical humanitarian organisation Médecins
Sans Frontières announced today, ahead of World TB Day on
24 March.
The global MDR-TB crisis coincides with a huge gap in access to diagnosis and treatment. Existing diagnostic tools and medicines are outdated and hugely expensive, and inadequate funding threatens the further spread of the disease. Worldwide, less than five percent of TB patients have access to proper diagnosis of drug resistance, and only 10 percent of MDR-TB patients are estimated to have access to treatment – far less in low-resource settings where prevalence is highest.
“Wherever we look for drug resistant TB we are finding it in alarming numbers, suggesting current statistics may only be scratching the surface of the problem,” said Médecins Sans Frontières President Dr. Unni Karunakara. “With 95 percent of TB patients worldwide lacking access to proper diagnosis, efforts to scale-up detection of MDR-TB are being severely undermined by a retreat in donor funding – precisely when increased funding is needed most.”
Data collected from Médecins Sans Frontières projects around the world have shocked doctors tackling the disease.
In Myanmar, of an estimated 9,300 new cases of MDR-TB every year, so far just over 300 patients in total have received treatment. TB prevalence in Myanmar is more than three times the global average and Myanmar is among the 27 countries with the highest MDR-TB rates in the world. The cancellation of an entire round of funding from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria threatens to seriously undermine a five-year plan to reach a further 10,000 people living with MDR-TB in Myanmar, along with scale-up plans in many other countries.
“Yet again, donors have turned their backs on people living with TB in Myanmar” said Peter Paul de Groote, Head of Mission for Médecins Sans Frontières in Myanmar. “Every day we at Médecins Sans Frontières are confronted with the tragic consequences of these decisions: desperately sick people and unnecessary deaths.”
In the north of the Central Asian country of Uzbekistan, 65 percent of patients treated by Médecins Sans Frontières in 2011 were diagnosed with MDR-TB. Of those patients, 30-40 percent had presented to the clinic for the first time, an unprecedented number globally – indicating that drug resistance is not only fuelled by incorrect treatment of TB, but is also transmitting in its own right.
In South Africa, where the TB burden is one of the highest worldwide, Médecins Sans Frontières has seen a 211 percent increase in TB diagnosis per month in its program in KwaZulu Natal, following the introduction of a new rapid diagnostic test. Of those patients confirmed with TB, 13.2 percent were resistant to the drug rifampicin, one of the most effective first-line drugs for treating TB.
In India, over-the-counter drug sales and an unregulated private health sector continue to fuel the development of drug resistance. An estimated 99,000 people are infected with MDR-TB each year, of whom only one percent receive adequate treatment.
The global crisis is exacerbated by a perfect storm of lengthy treatment regimens (around two years) with highly toxic drugs, most of which were developed mid-last century and have unpleasant side effects. Reduced funds—notably recent Global Fund cuts—and a small market with few manufacturers, have kept the costs of some of the drugs prohibitively expensive. Furthermore, expanded use of a new rapid diagnostic tool with the potential to massively increase early detection of drug-resistant TB in low-resource settings is inhibited by unaffordability. It is exactly in those places where the ability to detect TB within hours—as opposed to days or weeks—is most needed to save lives.
Médecins Sans Frontières is calling on governments, international donors, and drug companies to fight the spread of drug-resistant TB with new financing and new efforts to develop effective and affordable diagnostic tools and drugs. Far shorter and less toxic drug regimens are needed, along with currently non-existent formulations for children, and a point-of-care diagnostics test. Regulatory measures need to be enforced to prevent further spread of the disease due to mismanagement by practitioners.
“We need new drugs,
new research, new programs, and a new commitment from
international donors and governments to tackle this deadly
disease,” said Dr. Karunakara. “Only then, will more
people be tested, treated and cured. The world can no longer
sit back and ignore the threat of MDR-TB. We must act
now.”
NOTES:
TB:
Despite existing since antiquity, TB is the second biggest
killer globally today - and there are more and more cases of
TB resistant to first-line drugs normally used to treat it.
Currently, an estimated 12 million people are living with TB
(2010) – reference WHO Global TB Report
2011
MDR-TB: Multidrug-resistant TB
(MDR-TB) is a form of TB that does not respond to standard
treatments using first-line drugs. It is difficult and takes
much longer to treat – around two years, with highly toxic
drugs. Drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) developed during
the treatment of drug-sensitive TB, when patients fail to
complete their full course of treatment, drug supply
interruptions, or when healthcare workers provide improper
drug doses or improper, expired, or poor-quality medicine;
and is now transmitting from person to person in its own
right.
Funding cuts: Faced with a
serious funding shortage after a disappointing replenishment
conference, and after donors scaled back their pledges, the
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria took
the unprecedented step in November 2011 of cancelling a
round of funding grants. Without ‘Round 11’, no new
grants for scale-up will be disbursed until 2014, leaving
countries unable to aggressively tackle their epidemics.
The cancellation of Global Fund Round 11 comes at a time
when scale-up of DR-TB programs is most
needed.
ENDS