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Simple and rapid diagnostic tools key for fighting TB: MSF
EPP News Bureau - Mumbai
In the absence of a simple, rapid test for detecting tuberculosis (TB), care
providers in developing countries will continue to miss about half of all the
people who need tuberculosis treatment. Efforts to control TB globally will
be undermined, said the medical humanitarian organisation Doctors Without Borders/Medecins
Sans Frontieres (MSF) in a release.
I am sick and tired of watching TB kill my patients. It often feels
as though I practice medicine with my hands tied behind my back. Since I have
to use a 19th-century diagnostic tool that is wrong more times than not, it
is like being blindfolded as well, said Dr Martha Bedelu, an MSF
physician working in South Africa.
Diagnosing TB in developing countries still relies on sputum microscopy, a diagnostic
method that was developed 123 years ago. It only detects TB bacilli in 45 to
60 per cent of all people who have TB, and is even less effective for those
who have both HIV and TB over 30 per cent of the nearly 40 million people living
with HIV/AIDS globally. In the era of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, this
does not work at all in children, said Dr Bedelu.
Nearly nine million people develop TB disease every year, and the vast majority
of them live in developing countries, where 99 per cent of all TB deaths occur
and where 90 per cent of all people living with HIV/AIDS live. Yet most existing
efforts to develop more effective TB tests are technology-driven and focus on
the more lucrative Western markets.
MSF is committed to participating in the development of new tests
by assessing the feasibility of new technology in our field projects. But we
fear that current product development is not going to result in an easy-to-use
rapid method of diagnosing TB in all patients, said Drs Campaign
for Access to Essential Medicines. We need something similar to
what our teams now use for malaria: a simple test which yields results almost
instantly and can be used by any laboratory technician, nurse or health workers
even when far away from a laboratory.
MSF is well aware of the challenges of TB diagnosis and has been working with
experts to see how the development of diagnostic tests adapted to the needs
of patients and health personnel in developing countries could be accelerated.
We need a lot more investment and interest in basic science that
looks at completely new ways of diagnosing TB, said Dr Matthys.
Research and product development intended to simplify and reduce
the cost of existing diagnostic techniques and other more rapid, simple, sensitive
and specific methods must be supported, he added.
MSF is upgrading the laboratory facilities it uses by enhanced microscopy, and
improving diagnostic and follow-up of treatment with culture, X-rays, drug sensitivity
testing and training of local staff. But the longer it takes to
introduce a truly useful and simple tool for detecting TB, the bigger the number
of people dying of TB without ever having had a chance to know what killed them,
Dr Francine Matthys said.
MSF treats TB patients in nearly 50 projects in 24 countries worldwide. 16,500
TB patients were admitted in MSF projects in 2004 and many more were diagnosed
by MSF and referred to national TB programs. MSF advocates for improved TB care
and more research and development into better TB vaccines, diagnostic tests,
and treatments.
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