TB needs the same investment COVID-19 has received

24 March 2022 | Story Zakiyah Ebrahim. Photo Getty Images. Read time 10 min.
There is no new vaccine available to prevent TB, with only a few clinical trials taking place currently.
There is no new vaccine available to prevent TB, with only a few clinical trials taking place currently.

Tuberculosis (TB) has always suffered from being easily forgotten. We’ve had a generalised epidemic since the 1900s – for more than a century – and we have not really made headway, says the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Professor Linda-Gail Bekker, a physician-scientist with a keen interest in HIV and TB. Weighing in on the seriousness of the TB epidemic is Professor Thomas Scriba, who directs the clinical immunology laboratory at the South African Tuberculosis Vaccine Initiative (SATVI) at UCT.

  • TB is an infectious disease that kills more than 1 million people each year, yet, it is largely neglected.
  • There is still no new vaccine available to prevent the disease, with only a few clinical trials taking place currently.
  • Yet, in less than a year, several Covid vaccine candidates became available - a testament to what could happen if the same focus was placed on TB, say experts.

It’s a disease that claims the lives of around 1.5 million people each year and estimates last year suggested that 2 billion people were infected worldwide. It’s present in all countries and age groups globally. It is also a disease that is curable and preventable, but that has been grossly neglected for years and especially sidelined for the past two years, where Covid-19 has taken the centre stage.

“Tuberculosis (TB) has always suffered from being easily forgotten. We’ve had a generalised epidemic since the 1900s - for more than a century - and we have not really made headway,” Professor Linda-Gail Bekker, a physician-scientist with a keen interest in HIV and TB, told Health24.

Bekker is also the co-principal investigator on SA’s Sisonke Covid-19 vaccine trial.

She added:

 

“I would say not only have we taken our focus off TB in the last two years, but I would argue that we haven’t really had sufficient focus on the problem prior to Covid.”

Her comments underscore this year’s theme for World TB Day - ‘Invest to End TB. Save Lives’. 

“And there’s no question that, when you see what was invested in Covid - the research that went into preventive and therapeutic options - if we have even just some of that for TB, it could be terrific,” she added.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), the aim of this year’s theme is to bring attention to the urgent need to invest resources for the fight against ending TB, which, it says, is especially critical in the context of the current Covid pandemic that has dampened the progress made to end TB.

Last year, a report by Stop TB Partnership, for example, noted that 12 months of Covid eliminated 12 years of progress in the global fight against TB.

'Single largest infectious killer for centuries'

Also weighing in on the seriousness of the TB epidemic was Professor Thomas Scriba, who directs the clinical immunology laboratory at the South African Tuberculosis Vaccine Initiative (SATVI), University of Cape Town.

“TB is and has been the single largest infectious killer of humans for centuries … As a result [of disruptions caused by the pandemic] thousands of additional people have died from TB and for the first time in 15 years, the number of deaths from TB has increased year on year in 2021.”

Importantly, Scriba explained that even if a patient with TB is successfully treated, they are likely to have long-lasting and debilitating health problems, especially with respiratory impairment. 

Bekker added:

 

“TB doesn’t just sit there in your lungs. If you have the disease, it’s progressive, and many of the chronic lung disorders we see in this country are in people who’ve had previous TB. And once you’ve had previous TB, even if you’ve been treated, you have a high risk of getting it again.”

There should be more awareness

South Africa is one of the 30 high TB burden countries which accounts for the majority of new cases. And in a country like ours, with a generalised TB epidemic, everybody needs to be aware of the disease, know what their risk is, and what they could be doing to reduce their risk, said Bekker.

“It’s a little bit like what we learned with Covid - the two are very similar. They’re airborne diseases that can be reduced by having better ventilation, awareness of our close contacts, and making sure infectious individuals do not infect other people.

“Yet, somehow we haven’t had that same concerted effort. And instead of utilising the opportunity of saying ‘same-same’ during Covid, we put all our energy into Covid and completely forgot TB which is a shame,” she added.

Knowing your risk

Unfortunately, people generally have a nonchalant attitude toward TB, even though it kills far more commonly than Covid does, said Bekker, adding: "And so we need to take a whole new view on the TB epidemic."

Scriba said that children below the age of five are particularly at risk for TB. Adults living with HIV, diabetes, smokers, people who abuse alcohol, and those who are undernourished are also at high risk. “This represents a very large proportion of the South African population,” he said.

Bekker also commented: “By the time a child enters primary school, one in five will be infected with TB. By the time they are mid-way through high school, one in two is infected - that’s actually far from normal and doesn’t happen anywhere else in the world.”

Adopting active-case finding approach 

Several researchers have pointed out that SA’s healthcare system needs a better approach to adopting active case-finding, which refers to locating and diagnosing TB, either in people who may not recognise that they have symptoms of the disease, or those who do but do not, or cannot, access healthcare facilities.

Bekker agreed, saying that the key to TB is to find a case before that case is able to transmit the pathogen to others.

“It's not just about curing and treating someone when they’ve had the disease for a really long time. You want to get to them as soon as possible so that they don’t have an opportunity to transmit to others. That needs very active work - to try and reduce the time between acquiring and developing infectious TB and passing it onto others,” which is partly due to diagnostics, she said.

Similarly, Scriba believed that resources for finding and diagnosing people with TB, and providing them with antibiotic treatment, have been inadequate for decades. “It is imperative that much more is done to improve care of those with TB and programmes to find, diagnose and treat people with TB,” he said.

SA’s neglected vaccine trial

Around four years ago, SA ran a trial of a candidate TB vaccine that showed a 50% reduction in the progression from infection to disease. A follow-up trial has not been done, which means that the data cannot be confirmed. “It’s not months, but years later, and we have not pursued that. It’s mind blowing,” said Bekker, who drew attention to the few months it took to develop several Covid vaccine candidates.

The pandemic has shown what can be done when there is real resolve to reduce the impact of a communicable disease, said Bekker.

Reporting by Health-E News last month noted that there are currently nine candidates in phases 2 and 3 of the TB vaccine clinical trials. But Mark Hatherill, a researcher from SATVI, told the publication that if none of the candidates are successful, there were very few that could fill those positions in the next five to ten years.

Investment, investment, investment

For Scriba, urgency and real commitment to tackling the TB epidemic is needed.

“The unprecedented response to the Covid-19 pandemic shows that it is possible to mount a massive, rapid and comprehensive response to an infectious disease killer of this magnitude. It is critical that significantly more investment is devoted into research to improve strategies to find, diagnose and treat people with TB,” he said.

This would include tools and strategies used to find and treat people earlier, before they develop irreversible lung damage and transmit the bacterium to others. “There has been exciting and promising progress in recent years, but the chronic underinvestment makes this progress slow and frustrating,” added Scriba.

Additionally, attention also needs to be paid to investing in strategies to prevent TB. Said Scriba:

 

“For a disease that is so difficult to diagnose and treat, vaccination to prevent development of TB is a no-brainer. But, we have one TB vaccine, which is 101 years old! Yet, we have learnt that it is possible to identify a new infectious organism and develop and deploy several new vaccines within two years if there is enough incentive, investment and cooperation.”

Around 150 vaccines for Covid are in clinical trials globally. Sadly, this figure for TB vaccines is ten times lower. The response to TB should be no different to the response to that of Covid, said Scriba.

This article first appeared on News24.

For licensing information please visit the source website.

UCT’s response to COVID-19

COVID-19 is a global pandemic that caused President Cyril Ramaphosa to declare a national disaster in South Africa on 15 March 2020 and to implement a national lockdown from 26 March 2020. UCT is taking the threat of infection in our university community extremely seriously, and this page will be updated with the latest COVID-19 information. Please note that the information on this page is subject to change depending on current lockdown regulations.

Minister of Health, Dr Joe Phaahla, has in June 2022 repealed some of South Africa’s remaining COVID-19 regulations: namely, sections 16A, 16B and 16C of the Regulations Relating to the Surveillance and the Control of Notifiable Medical Conditions under the National Health Act. We are now no longer required to wear masks or limit gatherings. Venue restrictions and checks for travellers coming into South Africa have now also been removed.

In July 2022, the University of Cape Town (UCT) revised its approach to managing the COVID-19 pandemic on UCT campuses in 2022.
Read the latest document available on the UCT policies web page.

 

Campus communications

 
2022

Adjusting to our new environment 16:50, 23 June 2022
VC Open Lecture and other updates 17:04, 13 April 2022
Feedback from UCT Council meeting of 12 March 2022 09:45, 18 March 2022
UCT Council
March 2022 graduation celebration 16:45, 8 March 2022
Report on the meeting of UCT Council of 21 February 2022 19:30, 21 February 2022
UCT Council
COVID-19 management 2022 11:55, 14 February 2022
Return to campus arrangements 2022 11:15, 4 February 2022

UCT Community of Hope Vaccination Centre

On Wednesday, 20 July, staff from the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Faculty of Health Sciences came together with representatives from the Western Cape Government at the UCT Community of Hope Vaccination Centre at Forest Hill Residence to acknowledge the centre’s significance in the fight against COVID-19 and to thank its staff for their contributions. The centre opened on 1 September 2021 with the aim of providing quality vaccination services to UCT staff, students and the nearby communities, as well as to create an opportunity for medical students from the Faculty of Health Sciences to gain practical public health skills. The vaccination centre ceased operations on Friday, 29 July 2022.

With the closure of the UCT Community of Hope Vaccination Centre, if you still require access to a COVID-19 vaccination site please visit the CovidComms SA website to find an alternative.

 

“After almost a year of operation, the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Community of Hope Vaccination Centre, located at the Forest Hill residence complex in Mowbray, will close on Friday, 29 July 2022. I am extremely grateful and proud of all staff, students and everyone involved in this important project.”
– Vice-Chancellor Prof Mamokgethi Phakeng

With the closure of the UCT Community of Hope Vaccination Centre, if you still require access to a COVID-19 vaccination site please visit the CovidComms SA website to find an alternative.


Thank You UCT Community

Frequently asked questions

 

Global Citizen Asks: Are COVID-19 Vaccines Safe & Effective?

UCT’s Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine (IDM) collaborated with Global Citizen, speaking to trusted experts to dispel vaccine misinformation.



If you have further questions about the COVID-19 vaccine check out the FAQ produced by the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation (DTHF). The DTHF has developed a dedicated chat function where you can ask your vaccine-related questions on the bottom right hand corner of the website.

IDM YouTube channel | IDM website
 

 

“As a contact university, we look forward to readjusting our undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in 2023 as the COVID-19 regulations have been repealed.”
– Prof Harsha Kathard, Acting Deputy Vice-Chancellor: Teaching and Learning

We are continuing to monitor the situation and we will be updating the UCT community regularly – as and when there are further updates. If you are concerned or need more information, students can contact the Student Wellness Service on 021 650 5620 or 021 650 1271 (after hours), while staff can contact 021 650 5685.

 

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