[e-drug] Global TB initiative begins push for better drugs by 2010

E-DRUG: Global TB initiative begins push for better drugs by 2010
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[copied from Stop-TB with thanks. The original article is from AFP.
http://www.stoptb.org/material/news/press/AgenceFrancePresse.010205.htm
Copied as fair use. WB]

Headline: Global TB initiative begins push for better drugs by 2010
Dateline: 5 February 2001
Agence France Presse

An international anti-tuberculosis initiative, the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development, launched a campaign Monday to develop a more effective, cheaper treatment by 2010.

The organisation, which was formed in Bangkok in October, opened a head office in Cape Town which will coordinate and fund research in tuberculosis in developing countries.

"There has not been a major new treatment for TB for the past 30 years, so we are going to try and find one by 2010," Carlos Morel, the chairman of the alliance's board and a UN World Health Organisation programme director, said after opening the centre.

The director of the research drive, Bernard Fourie, said the programme was aimed at finding a "drug that is more effective so that it needs to be used for a shorter time."

"We want to reduce the treatment period by at least 50 percent, otherwise what we achieve is not very dramatic."

The medicine needed to cure a tuberculosis victim currently costs about 60 dollars but the long treatment period -- some six months -- makes it hard ensure patients complete treatment.

And interrupted treatment in turn gives rise to drug resistant strains of the disease.

Fourie said the infrastructure costs of prolonged treatment was crippling for the poor countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America that are home to most TB sufferers.

"If we could find something that costs 1,000 dollars but consists of one single injection then we might be saving money," he said.

He said the centre's research projects would also seek ways to improve the current TB treatment.

But, he said, by themselves "the current tools will not be sufficient" to cope with the "disastrous" worldwide increase in tuberculosis which is fuelled by the spread of HIV/AIDS.

This is reversing the gains made against TB in Africa and Asia, and India seemed set to follow suit as AIDS spreads there, he said.

According to the World Health Organisation there are an estimated eight million new tuberculosis cases and at least two million deaths per year worldwide.

Morel said international organisations were partly to blame for the lack of new treatments to fight the rise in TB as "we thought the battle was won."

The Global Alliance for TB Drug Development was started with 40 million dollars in funding from the Rockefeller and the Gates foundations in the United States.

Morel said the alliance would not to set up its own research institutions but fund projects already running, particularly in developing countries, and coordinate their findings.

About 100 have applied for funding and the first allocations will be made in April.

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