Target regimen profiles for tuberculosis treatment.
Christian LienhardtKelly E DooleyPayam NahidCharles WellsTheresa S RyckmanEmily A KendallGerry DaviesGrania BrigdenGavin ChurchyardDaniela Maria CirilloEugenia Di MecoRamya GopinathCarole MitnickCherise ScottFarhana AmanullahCathy BansbachMartin BoereeMichael CampbellFrancesca ConradieAngela CrookCharles L DaleyKeertan DhedaAndreas DiaconAgnes GebhardDebra HannaNorbert HeinrichAnneke HesselingDavid HoltzmanMathilde JachymPeter KimChristoph LangeLindsay McKennaGraeme MeintjesNorbert NdjekaNguyen Viet NhungBern-Thomas Nyang'waNicholas I PatonRaghuram RaoMichael RichRada SavicIngrid SchoemanBoitumelo Semete MakokotlelaMel SpigelmanEugene SunElin SvenssonPhumeza TisileFrancis VaraineAndrew VernonMukadi Ya DiulTereza KasaevaMatteo ZignolMedea GegiaFuad MirzayevSamuel G SchumacherPublished in: Bulletin of the World Health Organization (2024)
Simpler, shorter, safer and more effective treatments for tuberculosis that are easily accessible to all people with tuberculosis are desperately needed. In 2016, the World Health Organization (WHO) developed target regimen profiles for the treatment of tuberculosis to make drug developers aware of both the important features of treatment regimens, and patient and programmatic needs at the country level. In view of recent ground-breaking advances in tuberculosis treatment, WHO has revised and updated these regimen profiles. We used a similar process as for the 2016 profiles, including a baseline treatment landscape analysis, an initial stakeholder survey, modelling studies estimating the impact and cost-effectiveness of novel tuberculosis treatment regimens, and an extensive stakeholder consultation. We developed target regimen profiles for the treatment of rifampicin-susceptible and rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis, as well as a pan-tuberculosis regimen that would be appropriate for patients with any type of tuberculosis. We describe the revised target regimen profile characteristics, with specific minimal and optimal targets to be met, rationale and justification, and aspects relevant to all target regimen profiles (drug susceptibility testing, adherence and forgiveness, treatment strategies, post-tuberculosis lung disease, and cost and access considerations). We discuss the trade-offs of proposed characteristics for decision-making at developmental or operational levels. We expect that, following these target regimen profile revisions, tuberculosis treatment developers will produce regimens that are quality-assured, affordable and widely available, and that meet the needs of affected populations.