Indian
doctors have reported the country’s first cases of “totally drug-resistant
tuberculosis,” a long-feared and virtually untreatable form of the killer lung
disease.
It’s not the first time highly resistant cases
like this have been seen. Since 2003, patients have been documented in Italy
and Iran. It has mostly been limited to impoverished areas, and has not spread
widely. But experts believe there could be many undocumented cases.
No one expects the Indian TB strains to
rapidly spread elsewhere. The airborne disease is mainly transmitted through
close personal contact and isn’t nearly as contagious as the flu. Indeed, most
of the cases of this kind of TB were not from person-to-person infection but
were mutations that occurred in poorly treated patients.
What’s more, there’s a debate within the
public health community about whether to even label TB infections as totally
drug resistant. The World Health Organization hasn’t accepted the term and
still considers the cases to be what’s now called extensively drug-resistant
TB, or XDR. However, Dr. Paul Nunn, a coordinator at the WHO’s Stop TB
Department in Geneva, said there is ample proof that these virtually
untreatable cases do exist.
The Indian hospital that saw the initial cases
tested a dozen medicines and none of them worked, a pretty comprehensive
assessment. A TB expert at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
said they do appear to be totally resistant to available drugs.
“It is concerning,” said Dr. Kenneth Castro,
director of the CDC’s Division of Tuberculosis Elimination. “Anytime we see
something like this, we better get on top of it before it becomes a more
widespread problem.”
Ordinary TB is easily cured by taking
antibiotics for six to nine months. However, if that treatment is interrupted
or the dose is cut down, the stubborn bacteria battle back and mutate into a
tougher strain that can no longer be killed by standard drugs. The disease
becomes harder and more expensive to treat.
In India, doctors in Mumbai have reported a
total of 12 patients who failed initial treatment and also didn’t respond to
the medicines tried next over an average of two to three years. Three have
died. None of the others have been successfully treated.
The doctors detailed the first four cases in a
letter to a U.S. medical journal last month, blaming private doctors for
prescribing inappropriate drug plans that sparked greater resistance in three
of those four patients.
“These three patients had received erratic,
unsupervised second-line drugs, added individually and often in incorrect
doses, from multiple private practitioners,” wrote the doctors from P.D.
Hinduja National Hospital and Medical Research Center in the journal Clinical
Infectious Diseases.
One of the doctors, Zarir Udwadia, in a phone
interview, said there is little hope for the surviving nine patients, all poor
slum dwellers living in the community. He said he has detected one case of a
mother passing the strain to a daughter living in close quarters. One of the
patients was also infected with HIV, which typically results in faster death.
Udwadia criticized the testing and treatment
methods of the Indian government’s TB program, which he says forces patients to
turn to private doctors, many of whom do not understand how to properly treat
TB or the risks of increasing drug resistance by prescribing the wrong drugs.
“It was a given that this would happen,”
Udwadia said. “They have had no help from the Indian TB system. They are the
untouchables, so no one is making a fuss. They don’t have the power to
vocalize. There’s going to be more family contacts. It’s going to spread for
sure.”
India’s Health Ministry did not respond to
phone calls and written requests for comment Monday and last week.
Similar highly resistant cases have been noted
before. In 2003, two Italian women died and there were 15 cases reported from
Iran in 2009. That same year, The Associated Press reported on a case of a
Peruvian teenager who was infected at home but diagnosed while visiting
Florida. He was successfully treated for a year and a half with experimental
high doses of medicines not typically used for TB, costing about $500,000.
Those resources are unthinkable in the
developing world, where TB remains a menacing killer and where few hospitals
can perform tests to find out which antibiotics might work.
“For there to be another report coming out
from India is no surprise at all. Indeed, in a sense, it’s surprising it’s
taken so long,” said WHO’s Nunn. This is “yet another alarm call for countries
and others engaged in TB control to do their jobs properly.”
Tuberculosis is an age-old scourge that lies
dormant in an estimated 1 in 3 people worldwide. About 10 percent of those
people eventually develop active TB, which kills roughly 2 million a year,
according to the WHO. Each victim infects an average of 10 to 15 others every
year, typically through sneezing or coughing.
If a TB case is found to be resistant to the
two most powerful anti-TB drugs, the patient is classified as having multi
drug-resistant TB (MDR). An even worse classification of TB — one the WHO
accepts — is extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR), a form of the disease that
was first reported in 2006 and is virtually resistant to all drugs.
An estimated 20 percent of the world’s
multi-drug-resistant cases are found in India, which is home to a quarter of
all types of tuberculosis cases worldwide.
AP
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