Authors
Alimuddin I Zumla, Stephen H Gillespie, Michael Hoelscher, Patrick PJ Philips, Stewart T Cole, Ibrahim Abubakar, Timothy D McHugh, Marco Schito, Markus Maeurer, Andrew J Nunn
Publication date
2014/4/1
Source
The Lancet infectious diseases
Volume
14
Issue
4
Pages
327-340
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
About 1·3 million people died of tuberculosis in 2012, despite availability of effective drug treatment. Barriers to improvements in outcomes include long treatment duration (resulting in poor patient adherence and loss of patients to follow-up), complex regimens that involve expensive and toxic drugs, toxic effects when given with antiretroviral therapy, and multidrug resistance. After 50 years of no antituberculosis drug development, a promising pipeline is emerging through the repurposing of old drugs, re-engineering of existing antibacterial compounds, and discovery of new compounds. A range of novel antituberculosis drugs are in preclinical development, several phase 2 and 3 trials are underway, and use of adjunct therapies is being explored for drug-sensitive and drug-resistant tuberculosis. Historical advances include approval of two new drugs, delamanid and bedaquiline. Combinations of new and existing …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AI Zumla, SH Gillespie, M Hoelscher, PPJ Philips… - The Lancet infectious diseases, 2014