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Transcript Treatment - Science Center
Multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium
tuberculosis: The Next Threat to
Humanity
Natalia Grob
April 28, 2005
http://www.i-volume.com/stoptb/details.asp?id=660
Outline
M. tuberculosis
History
Pathogenicity
Infection
MDR-TB
1st and 2nd line drugs
Public Health
Treatment
Future
Worldwide Concern
20 million people will
die in the next decade
Most common cause
of death due to single
infectious agent
Disease of poverty
http://stoptb.lpipserver.com/library_new.asp
History
Eradication: 2010
Re-emergence & resurgence
Immigration
HIV epidemic
Deteriorating health infrastructure
Inadequate institutional control
MDR-TB
Basic Biology
Gram positive
Slow growing
No basic virulence
factors (exotoxins,
capsules, etc.)
Facultative
intracellular parasite
of macrophages
http://www-medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/INFEHTML/INFEC033.html
Genome
H37Rv
4,411,529 base pairs
4,000 genes
Aerobic and
anaerobic enzymes
Cole et al. (1998)
Pathogenicity
Slow generation time
High lipid concentration in cell wall
Impermeability and resistance to
antimicrobials
Resistance to killing by acidic/alkaline
compounds
Resistance to osmotic lysis via complement
deposition and attack by lysozyme
Phagosome maturation arrest
Blocking Phagolysosome Fusion
No phagolysosome formation
persistence of tubercule bacillus
Key players:
Ca2+
LAM
EEA1
Syntaxin 6
Calcium Cascade
Ca2+
CaMKII
LAM
*LAM
EEA1
hVPS34
Phagosome maturation
Maturation cascade
EEA1 & Syntaxin 6
Lysosome hydrolases
Acidification
Maturation
ATPase
Acidification
Maturation
Transmission
One droplet = 3 bacilli
Talking five minutes =
3000 droplets = 9000
bacilli!
http://catalog.cmsp.com/datav3/it060009.htm
Infection
T-lymphocytes more macrophages
Spherical granulomas tubercles
http://www-medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/TUTORIAL/MTB/MTB008.html
Necrosis: Soft White Cheese
http://www-medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/TUTORIAL/MTB/MTB002.html
Outline
M. tuberculosis
History
Pathogenicity
Infection
MDR-TB
1st and 2nd line drugs
Public Health
Treatment
Future
Drug Resistance
Types:
Acquired resistance
Transmitted resistance/Primary resistance
Amplified resistance
MDR-TB: isoniazid + rifampicin
Statistics
Diagnosis: mycobacterial culture and in vitro
sensitivity testing.
First-line Drugs
Sharma & Mohan (2004)
First-line Drugs: Rifampin
MDR-TB marker
Affects transcription of RNA
Cheruvu et al. (2001)
rpoB gene
RRDR
New mutations continually arise
First-line Drugs: Mutations
Cheruvu et al. (2001)
Second-line Drugs
Increased treatment
difficulties
Expensive,unavailable
More side effects
Difficult Ab penetration
Longer treatment
Controversy
Standard treatments
Everything it takes
http://www.tbcta.org/Pages/home.php
Second-line Drugs: SQ109
EMB analog;
enhanced efficacy
Penetrates
macrophage
phagosome
High concentration in
target organs
Jia et al. (2004)
Second First-Line Drugs: Hope?
40 years!
Standard regime
Promise of R207910
Andries et al. (2005)
DOTS
WHO guidelines
Political commitment
Detection of TB
Standardized shortcourse chemotherapy
(SCC)
Uninterrupted supply
drugs
Recording and
reporting system
http://www.tbcta.org/Pages/home.php
Emergence of MDR-TB
Errors in treatment
monotherapy
Errors in diagnosis
Pre-existing MDR
Noncompliance
Drug addiction, mental illness
Low socioeconomic status, age, race,
education level
History
Little action from
WHO
NYC outbreak
global attention
Dr. Paul Farmer
“Mountains Beyond
Mountains”
http://www.brighamandwomens.org/socialmedicine/farmerbio.asp
The Irony
Model of MDR-TB emergence
Poor control of TB leads to MDR-TB
Less infectious than wild-type
Successful TB program hot zones
Treatment: Where?
Pablos-Mendez et al. (2002)
Treatment: How?
First-line drugs whenever possible
Injectable agent
Second-line drugs
Treatment: Who?
Children = important
special cases
Difficulty in obtaining
sample
Cost constraints
Importance of medical
history
Importance of early
diagnosis
http://stoptb.lpipserver.com/library_new.asp
What Now?
Control is priority
Locally severe problem
Three-part response:
SCC implementation
Surveillance and testing
Second-line drugs?
What Now?
DOTS and DOTS-Plus
Promotion of adherence
Monitor adverse effects
Enablers and enhancers
Concluding Remarks
Big issue, many
opinions, many (often
opposing) theories
New drugs needed
Medicine and public
health
Read “Mountains
Beyond Mountains”
Thanks a bunch!
Peer reviewers Amy
Malhowski and Caitlin
Reed
Professor Christine
White-Ziegler
Emerging Infectious
Diseases Class
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