Target: Zero TB Deaths

Global health specialists chart a new path to defeat this treatable disease 

Each year, nearly 2 million people die from tuberculosis—a treatable disease that has been brought under control in the United States but which continues to ravage other parts of the world.

This health inequity should prompt a complete rethinking of the way tuberculosis is fought on a global level, argues Salmaan Keshavjee, an assistant professor in global health and social medicine and medicine at Harvard Medical School, and Paul Farmer, the Kolokotrones University Professor at Harvard University and head of the HMS Department of Global Health and Social Medicine.

“The global approach to fighting tuberculosis has been lacking,” says Keshavjee, who is also a physician in the Division of Global Health Equity at Brigham and Women’s.

“For too long we’ve accepted a divergence in the standard of care between people living in the rich world and those suffering from this disease elsewhere," he says.

Their argument appears in an essay published Sept. 6 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Paul Farmer reviews the case of a TB patient in Achham, Nepal, (July 2012). Photo: Bec Rollins, Partners In Health.

“The history of tuberculosis is in many ways the history of modern medicine; the history of drug-resistant tuberculosis is the history of most infectious diseases for which we've developed effective antibiotics,” says Farmer, the chief of the Division of Global Health Equity at Brigham and Women’s and co-founding director of Partners In Health.

“As an airborne infection, tuberculosis has always challenged confident policy recommendations, and we seek to review these here," Farmer says.

Treatment protocols for multi-drug resistant tuberculosis have been known for decades; however, barely 0.5 percent of all newly diagnosed patients worldwide receive treatment that is the standard of care in the United States. Even among groups known to face a high risk of mortality from tuberculosis—such as children and people living with HIV—few patients have received appropriate treatment. According to the authors, this lack of treatment only fuels the pandemic because tuberculosis is transmitted through the air.

The authors also cite a lack of resources to combat the disease, arguing that investments to cure infected patients and efforts to stem the spread of tuberculosis pale in comparison to the amount of resources and energy dedicated globally to the AIDS epidemic.

In the article, written in commemoration of the New England Journal of Medicine’s 200th Anniversary, Keshavjee and Farmer explore the reasons why scientific knowledge about tuberculosis is not reflected in current global tuberculosis policy. For Keshavjee, understanding the construction of current policy is a critical part of moving forward.

“We want to encourage the international tuberculosis community to redouble its efforts to battle this disease, including adopting a goal of zero tuberculosis deaths,” says Keshavjee. “That means proactively looking for those who are already sick, ensuring they are rapidly diagnosed and putting them on appropriate treatment. It also means treating those with latent infection and implementing infection control measures that can stop the spread of the disease. This is the approach we’ve used in the United States and Western Europe, and it needs to become the global standard of care.” The authors also note that any solution must include an equity plan that addresses poverty, malnutrition and overcrowded living and working conditions.

“We've had the good fortune of working together on this problem, as clinicians and as policymakers and as researchers, for 15 years,” says Farmer. “We hope this critical review will prove helpful in rethinking the history of this disease and of other chronic infections, including HIV disease, for which treatments have been developed. All such pathogens—bacterial, viral, parasitic—undergo mutations when challenged with antibiotics; many are public health threats."

“This review is one step in understanding how efforts to combat tuberculosis arrived at its present state,” adds Keshavjee. “Our hope is that it will contribute to the conversation about the ways in which our global community can better prevent deaths from this treatable disease.”

Adapted from a Brigham and Women’s Hospital news release. Courtesy Brigham and Women’s Hospital.