WHO/Sanjit Das
Children outside of a school in India at the border with Bangladesh.
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Tuberculosis

    Overview

    TB is caused by bacteria (Mycobacterium tuberculosis) and it most often affects the lungs. TB is spread through the air when people with lung TB cough, sneeze or spit. A person needs to inhale only a few germs to become infected.

    Every year, 10 million people fall ill with tuberculosis (TB). Despite being a preventable and curable disease, 1.5 million people die from TB each year – making it the world’s top infectious killer.

    TB is the leading cause of death of people with HIV and also a major contributor to antimicrobial resistance.

    Most of the people who fall ill with TB live in low- and middle-income countries, but TB is present all over the world. About half of all people with TB can be found in 8 countries: Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines and South Africa.

    About a quarter of the global population is estimated to have been infected with TB bacteria, but most people will not go on to develop TB disease and some will clear the infection. Those who are infected but not (yet) ill with the disease cannot transmit it.

    People infected with TB bacteria have a 5–10% lifetime risk of falling ill with TB. Those with compromised immune systems, such as people living with HIV, malnutrition or diabetes, or people who use tobacco, have a higher risk of falling ill.

    Symptoms

    Common symptoms of TB disease include:

    • Prolonged cough

    • Chest pain

    • Weakness or fatigue

    • Weight loss

    • Fever

    • Night sweats

    Often, these symptoms will be mild for many months, thus leading to delays in seeking care and increasing the risk of spreading the infection to others. 

    If the healthcare provider suspects a patient to have TB disease, they will send the patient for testing. In the case of suspected lung TB disease, patients will be asked to give a sputum sample for testing for TB bacteria. For non-lung TB disease, samples of affected body fluids and tissue can be tested. WHO recommends rapid molecular diagnostic tests as initial tests for people showing signs and symptoms of TB. Other diagnostic tools can include sputum smear microscopy and chest X-rays. 

    With TB infection, a person gets infected with TB bacteria that lie inactive in the body. This infection can develop into TB disease if their immune system weakens. People with TB infection do not show any signs or symptoms of TB. To identify TB infection, healthcare providers will screen at-risk patients to rule out active TB, and they may use a skin or blood test to check for TB infection.

    Treatment

    TB disease is curable. It is treated by standard 6 month course of 4 antibiotics. Common drugs include rifampicin and isoniazid. In some cases the TB bacteria does not respond to the standard drugs. In this case, the patient has drug-resistant TB. Treatment for drug-resistant TB is longer and more complex. 

    The course of TB drugs is provided to the patient with information, supervision and support by a health worker or trained volunteer. Without such support, treatment adherence can be difficult. If the treatment is not properly completed, the disease can become drug-resistant and can spread.

    In the case of TB infection (where the patient is infected with TB bacteria but not ill), TB preventive treatment can be given to stop the onset of disease. This treatment uses the same drugs for a shorter time. Recent treatment options have shortened the duration to treatment to only 1 or 3 months, as compared to 6 months in the past. 

    News

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    Our work

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    Publications

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    Consolidated guidance on tuberculosis data generation and use: Module 4: Surveys of costs faced by households affected by tuberculosis

    One of the three high-level targets of the World Health Organization’s End TB Strategy (2016–2035) is that no TB-affected households face total...

    Use of computer-aided detection software for tuberculosis screening: WHO policy statement

    Screening with chest X-ray and CAD is one of the critical approaches available today to bridge the global gap in TB case detection. WHO has recommended...

    Tuberculosis and climate change: analytical framework and knowledge gaps

    This report explores the intersection of tuberculosis (TB) and climate change, highlighting how climate-related challenges such as food and water insecurity,...

    WHO consolidated operational handbook on tuberculosis: module 4: treatment and care

    The World Health Organization’s Global Programme on Tuberculosis & Lung Health (WHO/GTB) has integrated all existing implementation guidance...

    Podcasts

    Episode #135 – Facing the TB crisis

    Severe resource shortages are threatening the global response to end tuberculosis. Is the world on the brink of a global TB crisis? A quarter of the world’s population could be infected with TB and not even know it. Is there a cure? What is the treatment? How do we diagnose TB? Listen in to Dr Tereza Kasaeva on Science in 5 today.
    Presented by
    Vismita Gupta-Smith

    Alternative media

    Transcript

    VSG Tuberculosis is in the news, but not for the right reasons. A severe resource shortage is threatening the global response to end TB. And the disease is appearing in places where people had forgotten that it existed. Is the world on the brink of a global TB crisis? We are talking about a millennia-old disease that the world has not been able to end. In fact, in the five minutes that you will watch this Science in 5, 11 people would have died of tuberculosis. Our expert today is Doctor Tereza Kasaeva. Welcome, Tereza. Tereza, I heard something that I was also not aware of and it surprised me that a quarter of the world's population could be infected with TB and not even know it. Could you explain that? How concerned should we be?

    TK You are absolutely right, Vismita. The world doesn't seem to recognize how widespread the TB bacteria is. An estimated one in four people globally have been infected with TB bacteria, and yet not many of them realize the risks. While only five to ten percent of people infected with TB will develop an active disease, that's more than 10 million people falling ill every year.

    VGS So Tereza, TB is a highly infectious disease, right. It's airborne. It spreads through air. Is there a cure? What's the treatment and how do we diagnose it?

    TK TB is in fact a curable disease, but it requires completion of treatment. It would take several months, from four to six months of treatment with a combination of antibiotics. And even the most challenging, difficult forms of drug-resistant tuberculosis could be successfully treated. We have much better options available now. We have shorter, fully oral, injection-free treatments and more effective treatment now available. While tuberculosis affects primarily lungs, it could affect also other parts of our body - bones and joints, skin, kidneys and even the brain. Tuberculosis could be successfully treated. but the essential condition is early detection using rapid molecular diagnostic tests, including for the detection of drug resistant tuberculosis.

    VGS Tereza, how can we protect ourselves and our loved ones from TB?

    TK Protecting ourselves and our loved ones starts with awareness, early detection and treatment. Consult your physician if you see symptoms like prolonged coughing, fever, or weight loss, especially if you've been in contact with someone diagnosed with tuberculosis recently. This is especially important if you are belonging to one of the so-called risk groups like children, people with immuno compromised systems, people with HIV/AIDS and diabetes and undernourished.

    VSG So are we, is the world really on the brink of a TB crisis?

    TK In short, yes. Tuberculosis is the of the world's deadliest infectious disease. Remember, tuberculosis is a disease of poverty exacerbated by stigma, conflict and migration.

    VSG Tereza, why should the world invest in TB? And why is that more important now than ever?

    TK Investing in the TB response is not only a global health issue, it is a social, economic and global health security imperative. Tuberculosis devastates economies. It affects people in their most productive ages. It increases significantly health care costs. It drains the workforce. Unfortunately, millions of people with tuberculosis still don't have access to the lifesaving treatment due to the chronic and significant funding gaps. For the first time in more than over a century, we have 16 vaccine candidates in the pipeline and we know that vaccines could become game changers in the fight against TB. That's why urgent investments in TB research are required. Strengthening TB programmes actually improves global pandemic preparedness. TB is an urgent crisis, but one we can end if we act now. The cost of inaction is measured in lives and we can't afford to lose any more.

    VSG That was Science in 5 today. Until next time then, stay safe, stay healthy and stick with science.

     

    Speaker key

    • TK Tereza Kasaeva
    • VGS Vismita Gupta-Smith