Courtesy: "Associated Press (AP)", 16 May 2011
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CDC: New regimen drastically shortens TB treatment     
     ATLANTA     (AP)  -- Health officials on Monday celebrated a faster treatment for people  who have tuberculosis but aren't infectious, after investigators found a  new combination of pills knocks out the disease in three months instead  of nine.
That means more people are likely to  finish their treatment for latent tuberculosis, Centers for Disease  Control and Prevention officials said.
"New,  simpler ways to prevent TB disease are urgently needed, and this  breakthrough represents one of the biggest developments in TB treatment  in decades," CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden said, in a prepared statement.
For  decades, people infected with TB bacteria but not ill have been treated  with a special TB pill, isoniazid, taken once a day for nine months.  It's been the standard regimen despite problems getting people to take  the pill every day.
But in one of the largest  federal trials to examine preventive tuberculosis therapy, investigators  found that another regimen was just as effective. Just once a week and  for just three months, patients took a larger dose of isoniazid and also  a dose of another antibiotic, rifapentine.
About  82 percent of the people in the three-month regimen completed the full  treatment, while just 69 percent on the nine-month regimen did. Rates of  the most serious side effects were the same for both regimens.
What's more, only seven cases of TB disease developed in people on the new treatment, compared with 15 in the standard group.
"It  was quite effective," said Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, a Columbia University  professor of medicine and epidemiology who was involved in the study.
The  three-month regimen is also more expensive. The medicines alone cost  about $160, most of that from the price of rifapentine. Nine months of  isoniazid costs less than $6.
The costs of  both regimens grow when lab tests and other aspects of care are thrown  in, but the three-month regimen still ends up being more than twice as  expensive as the standard treatment.
The study  was led by Dr. Timothy Sterling of Vanderbilt University and was  presented Monday at the American Thoracic Society International  Conference in Denver.
The CDC is working with  consultants to examine the study's results and draft new guidelines for  treatment of latent TB. The guidelines should be finished later this  year, agency officials said.
Tuberculosis is  caused by bacteria spread from person to person through the air. TB  usually affects the lungs, and can lead to symptoms such as chest pain  and coughing up blood. Globally, it kills about 1.7 million people each  year.
Thanks to antibiotics and other  measures, the TB rate in the United States has been falling for years.  Last year, it hit an all-time low - a total of 11,181 reported cases of  TB illness.
But more than 11 million Americans  have latent TB, meaning they are infected with the TB bacteria but have  not had symptoms and are not infectious.
About  5 percent to 10 percent of people with latent TB develop the disease if  not treated, meaning they are a major obstacle to eliminating TB in the  United States.
"The 11 million persons with  latent TB represent a ticking bomb. They're the source of future TB  cases," said Dr. Kenneth Castro, director of the CDC's Division of  Tuberculosis Elimination.
Most Americans with  latent TB don't know they are infected, but testing has been targeted at  groups of people who tend to have higher rates of TB infection or who  are more susceptible to TB infection progressing into illness. About  300,000 to 400,000 Americans with latent TB start treatment each year.
But  many don't stick with it, sometimes because they feel well and don't  see the need to keep taking a pill against an illness they haven't  developed. Some don't like that they cannot drink alcohol while taking  isoniazid.
The study looked at about 8,000  people with latent TB in the United States, Canada, Brazil and Spain.  They were followed for nearly three years from the time they started the  study. Most of the top TB research centers in the United States were  involved.
About half were given the standard  treatment, a daily 300 milligrams dose of isoniazid for nine months, and  they took it on their own. The other half were put on a 900-milligram  dose of isoniazid and a 900 milligram dose of rifapentine, but did it in  front of a doctor or other health-care worker.
The  researchers acknowledged that follow-up studies are needed to see if  patients on the three-month regimen are as faithful at taking their  medicine when they aren't being monitored.
Also,  it's not clear how well the strategy would work in countries where TB  is more common and the odds of re-infection are much higher, health  officials said
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Note: The viewpoint expressed in this article is solely that of the writer / news outlet. "FATA Awareness Initiative" Team may not agree with the opinion presented.
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