杏吧原创

Three-in-one drug wipes the floor with TB

A new tuberculosis drug combination is less toxic, quicker and cheaper, and seems to work against drug-resistant strains

After decades rampaging across the globe, tuberculosis has a real fight on its hands. That鈥檚 thanks to the arrival of a drug combination that could for the first time dramatically shorten treatment and tackle both ordinary and multi-drug-resistant strains of TB.

Called PaMZ, the pill is a combination of the standard TB drug pyrazinamide with the antibiotic moxifloxacin 鈥 not previously used against TB 鈥 and PA-824, a drug whose potential against TB was reported by New 杏吧原创 in 2001.

PaMZ could wipe out several resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis 鈥 the cause of most cases of TB 鈥 which have been spreading through South Africa, India and the countries that made up the former Soviet Union. What鈥檚 more, it could work in a sixth of the time of existing treatments, at a tenth of the cost 鈥 as well as slashing by a third the number of pills required.

鈥淲e may have a major solution here,鈥 says Mario Raviglione, director of the World Health Organization鈥檚 Stop TB campaign. The new treatment is 鈥渟impler, less toxic and much cheaper鈥 than existing regimes, he says.

It also shows promise in treating TB in HIV-positive people, a real problem in sub-Saharan Africa.

PaMZ鈥檚 potential emerged from a study in which various permutations of its three constituent drugs, plus one newcomer, bedaquiline, were tested on sputum samples from groups of people with TB in Cape Town, South Africa. PaMZ outperformed all other combinations, killing 99 per cent of TB bacteria within two weeks 鈥 matching the four-drug treatment for ordinary TB.

In animal studies, PaMZ killed drug-resistant bacteria equally rapidly, and so could yield the first treatment lethal to both ordinary and resistant strains. It would also bring treatment time for resistant TB into line with that for ordinary TB. Andreas Diacon at the University of Stellenbosch in Cape Town, the studies鈥 lead researcher, hopes to begin a larger trial soon. 鈥淚f that鈥檚 successful, we may be able to roll the treatment out within four or five years,鈥 he says.

Journal reference: The Lancet, DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61080-0.