| First
Promising TB Drug in Decades, Say Researchers
The first new
tuberculosis drug in 40 years has successfully treated multidrug-resistant
tuberculosis (MDR-TB) patients in a clinical trial in South
Africa.
Diarylquinoline TMC207 works differently
from other anti-tuberculosis drugs by targeting an enzyme
of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the agent that causes TB.
"This is an exciting new development
and the first new TB drug in over forty years," says
Alexander Pym, one of the researchers and a chief specialist
scientist at the South African Medical Research Council's
Clinical and Biomedical TB Research Unit based in Durban,
South Africa.
The researchers gave the drug to 20 patients
in addition to standard therapy for MDR-TB for eight weeks.
Twenty-one patients received a placebo plus standard treatment.
About half the patients on TMC207 were
successfully treated compared to about ten per cent on the
placebo. The patients are being monitored to see if treatment
remains effective.
TMC207 was discovered using an old method
of drug discovery that has not been used in the last 40 years.
Modern approaches use computer software to identify drug targets
and then design the desired drug, while this approach tests
compounds on a rapidly growing relative of M. tuberculosis.
"What we saw over the eight weeks
was a significant difference in the rate in which tuberculosis
disappeared," Andreas Diacon, one of the researchers,
and the director of the Centre of Clinical Tuberculosis Research
at the University of Stellenbosch, told SciDev.Net.
The drug works on both drug-susceptible
and drug-resistant TB in the laboratory and the implications
are that this new drug might shorten treatment time for all
tuberculosis patients, says Diacon.
MDR-TB patients take five drugs for up
to 18 months and patients with standard tuberculosis take
four drugs for six months.
Diacon adds that because this is a new
drug with a new way of working patients will not have developed
a resistance potentially increasing the proportion
of people who could be cured.
A second group of MDR-TB patients is now
undergoing a longer, six-month trial of TCM207 in South Africa.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 19 June, 2009

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