From DOTS to DOST: a new framework for TB elimination in India
Singh UB, Rao R, Mattoo SK, Kumar N, Dhawan V, Garg V, Kushwaha BS, Shah A, et al. (13 authors)
The Lancet regional health. Southeast Asia · 2026-02
Abstract
India bears a quarter of the global tuberculosis (TB) burden and nearly one-third of TB related deaths, but substantial regional heterogeneity demands tailored elimination strategies. We propose the Dual-phase Operational Strategy for Tuberculosis elimination (DOST), a roadmap that explicitly addresses TB as both an infectious disease and a structural challenge. Phase 1 focuses on rapidly reducing transmission through intensified case-finding, upfront molecular diagnosis, and strengthened treatment, as demonstrated by India's 100-Day TB Campaign, which expanded community screening and accelerated therapy initiation. Phase 2 pivots to preventing disease progression by scaling up TB preventive treatment and addressing key drivers such as undernutrition, HIV, and diabetes. DOST emphasizes subnational adaptation: high-burden states prioritize disease reduction, while states nearing low incidence shift toward preventing flare-ups and sustaining progress. Rooted in the Hindi word dost (friend), this person-centered approach integrates medical and social support, recognizing that eliminating TB in India requires compassion paired with structural action. By sequencing and localizing proven interventions, DOST offers a pragmatic pathway from TB response to TB elimination.