TB Research

Recent Advancement of Tubercular Therapy in MDR-TB and DR-TB

Fiza Patel, Sushant Benade, Shraddha Nerkar, Priyanka Gavhade, Sheetal Rode, Ashoke Giri

International Journal for Research in Applied Science and Engineering Technology · 2025-04

Abstract

Abstract: Despite international efforts to control and eradicate tuberculosis (TB), it continues to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality on a global scale. Drug-resistant TB (DRTB) is a serious public health threat that affects global health security, economic burden, and access to high-quality care. To effectively address this issue, cooperation between governments, international organizations, and healthcare systems is essential. In December 2012, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted accelerated approval for bedaquiline (BDQ), a diarylquinoline drug, based on analysis of time to sputum culture conversion from two phase 2 trials.Although drug resistance is an inevitable side effect of drug use, multi-drug resistance can be controlled with precise diagnosis and customized treatment plans.Mycobacterium in MDR-TB is resistant to frontline medications such as isoniazid and rifampicin. Over 50% of medications are now resistant, making identification and treatment a pressing worldwide concern.More than any other infectious disease, tuberculosis (TB) ranks as the ninth leading cause of mortality worldwide. Due to increasing drug resistance, the epidemic is still present and will need substantial attention and funding to be eradicated. Despite the relatively low number of resources committed, several significant advancements have recently been made through increased collaboration and research networks. Drug-resistant TB regimens are increasingly using the newly available medications bedaquiline and delamanid as well as the repurposed medications linezolid, clofazimine, and carbapenems.In addition to appropriate use and drug resistance monitoring, combination therapy with additional anti-TB medications is recommended to prevent resistance. Following positive results from a phase III trial, the US FDA approved Pretomanid in August 2019. Pretomanid, linezolid, bedaquiline, A part of the BPaLM regimen, and moxifloxacin, has been authorized for the treatment of individuals with treatment-intolerant or non-responsive MDRTB or extensive pulmonary DRTB. Patients with MDRTB now have better clinical results and a higher quality of life because to this important management breakthrough. The WHO guidelines' inclusion is positive for the worldwide fight against DRTB. New therapeutic targets within the TB pathogenesis have been found and studied by researchers, providing encouraging opportunities for the creation of novel anti-TB medications.

MeSH terms

  • Tb treatment
  • Medicine
  • Tuberculosis