ABSTRACT
Tuberculosis (TB) drug research and development lay largely fallow from the 1960s
to the turn of the century. A realization that current treatments for this major public
health epidemic are proving inadequate to control the disease and prevent development
and spread of drug resistance has stimulated renewed activity during the past 5 to
10 years. As a result, there are now seven drugs in clinical development for TB and
many groups working on discovery-stage projects. This article summarizes the published
information available on the seven clinical candidates and describes some of the challenges
faced by those pursuing research and development of novel TB therapies.
KEYWORDS
Tuberculosis - treatment - clinical development - drug resistance
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1
Conducted by the OFLOTUB Consortium and its partners: the World Health Organization–based
Special Program for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR), the European
Commission (EU), the French Institut de Recherche pour le Dévelopement (IRD), and
Lupin Pharmaceuticals, Ltd
2
Sponsored by University College London and conducted with its partners: the Bayer
Healthcare/TB Alliance partnership, the British Medical Research Council, and clinical
trial sites in several high-burden countries.
Ann M GinsbergM.D. Ph.D.
Clinical Development, Global Alliance for TB Drug Development
40 Wall St., 24th Fl., New York, NY 10005
Email: ann.ginsberg@tballiance.org