Anti-tuberculosis treatment strategies and drug development: challenges and priorities.
Veronique Anne DartoisEric J RubinPublished in: Nature reviews. Microbiology (2022)
Despite two decades of intensified research to understand and cure tuberculosis disease, biological uncertainties remain and hamper progress. However, owing to collaborative initiatives including academia, the pharmaceutical industry and non-for-profit organizations, the drug candidate pipeline is promising. This exceptional success comes with the inherent challenge of prioritizing multidrug regimens for clinical trials and revamping trial designs to accelerate regimen development and capitalize on drug discovery breakthroughs. Most wanted are markers of progression from latent infection to active pulmonary disease, markers of drug response and predictors of relapse, in vitro tools to uncover synergies that translate clinically and animal models to reliably assess the treatment shortening potential of new regimens. In this Review, we highlight the benefits and challenges of 'one-size-fits-all' regimens and treatment duration versus individualized therapy based on disease severity and host and pathogen characteristics, considering scientific and operational perspectives.
Keyphrases
- clinical trial
- drug discovery
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- drug resistant
- randomized controlled trial
- emergency department
- pulmonary hypertension
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- hiv aids
- stem cells
- phase ii
- climate change
- bone marrow
- risk assessment
- hiv infected
- mesenchymal stem cells
- study protocol
- human health
- multidrug resistant
- combination therapy
- antiretroviral therapy
- electronic health record