Unitaid and Japan

Unitaid et la France

Unitaid and the UK Government

Unitaid Executive Board sets vision for the future with approval of five new areas for intervention at 44th session

PAHO and Unitaid strengthen partnership to eliminate communicable diseases from the Americas

Ahead of World TB Day, Unitaid and FIND welcome WHO resources to accelerate access to faster, more accurate tests for drug-resistant tuberculosis

  • A novel class of diagnostic technology could help hundreds of thousands of people affected with forms of TB that do not respond to first-line drugs quickly access appropriate treatment, if adequately scaled up
  • Targeted next-generation sequencing (tNGS) is a World Health Organization (WHO)-recommended diagnostic technology that can identify resistance to multiple TB drugs in a matter of days, compared with eight weeks required with conventional culture methods
  • The availability of NGS technologies, which can be used for many applications including monitoring and detection of several diseases, rapidly expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic – infrastructure that TB programs can now build on to improve care and reduce the spread of drug-resistant TB
  • Two WHO resources launched this week – new recommendations and a TB sequencing portal – will help drive implementation of tNGS for TB in low- and middle-income countries. The resources were developed based on evidence generated through the Unitaid-funded FIND-led Seq&Treat project

Geneva – Launched in advance of World Tuberculosis (TB) Day, 24 March, new World Health Organization (WHO) resources, underpinned by evidence generated through a Unitaid-FIND project, will help countries implement new technologies that can quickly identify resistance to a range of TB drugs and ensure that patients get the correct treatment with minimum delay.

Drug-resistance is a growing threat to TB care. Each year, close to half a million people become newly infected with strains of TB that are resistant to one or more of the drugs used to treat it. Only about 2 in 5 people access treatment, allowing drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) to spread. Of those who do reach care, a lack of insight into drug-resistance can impede their access to appropriate treatment.

A novel class of diagnostic technologies called targeted next generation sequencing (tNGS) can analyze the genes of the TB bacteria infecting a person and determine, in just a few days, which drugs are likely to work best. Compared with conventional culture-based tests that require up to eight weeks to identify resistance, these tools could significantly improve diagnosis and treatment success if implemented widely.

Targeted NGS is essential to supporting the rollout of new, shorter DR-TB regimens containing the drug bedaquiline, which alternative rapid diagnostic platforms do not have the capacity to identify. Moreover, tNGS can detect resistance to multiple drugs simultaneously and has the potential to integrate new resistance profiles as they become known – critical to staying ahead of TB mutations.

“The COVID-19 pandemic triggered rapid uptake of sequencing technology around the world, including in most, if not all, low- and middle-income countries,” said Dr Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of Unitaid. “When Unitaid first invested in this technology we never expected capacity to take off so quickly – if we act now, we can piggyback off these improvements in infrastructure to help countless people with drug-resistant tuberculosis get connected with the right treatment without delay.”

The new WHO tools provide critical guidance so countries can make use of sequencing capacity for TB diagnosis. WHO guidelines and the accompanying operational handbook will help operationalize the July 2023 recommendation, supported by the new TB sequencing portal, which serves as the knowledgebase to understand the association between mutations in the genes and resistance to TB medicines. The portal, developed in partnership with Unitaid and FIND, will help ensure that countries have the latest data on TB drug-resistance and that emerging resistance profiles can be quickly added to tNGS platforms.

“The endorsement by WHO of next-generation sequencing marks a pivotal moment, with the potential to significantly advance progress toward achieving the 2030 end TB goals,” said Dr Sergio Carmona, acting CEO and Chief Medical Officer at FIND. “Collaborating with Unitaid and partners to validate this technology has revealed its transformative power, enabling precise and rapid identification of optimal TB treatments, thereby potentially saving countless lives”

Countries and researchers are encouraged to contribute their DR-TB datasets to the sequencing portal to continue to strengthen the associations of TB mutations with drug-resistance.

The Unitaid-funded Seq&Treat project, led by FIND, has piloted sequencing technology for DR-TB diagnosis, informing the WHO’s recommendation for its use and laying the groundwork for scale-up in support of endTB targets.


Contacts for the media:

Hervé Verhoosel

Head of Communications and Spokesperson, Unitaid

M: +33 6 22 59 73 54

verhooselh@unitaid.who.int

Sarah-Jane Loveday

Director, Communications, UNFPA

M: +41 79 431 62 44

media@finddx.org


About Unitaid

We save lives by making critical health products available and affordable for people in low- and middle-income countries. We work with partners to identify innovative treatments, tests and tools, help tackle the market barriers that are holding them back, and get them to the people who need them most – fast. Since we were created in 2006, we have unlocked access to more than 100 groundbreaking health products to help address the world’s biggest health challenges, including HIV, TB, and malaria; women’s and children’s health; and pandemic prevention, preparedness and response. Every year, more than 300 million people benefit from the products we’ve helped roll out. https://unitaid.org

About FIND

FIND accelerates equitable access to reliable diagnosis around the world. We are working to close critical testing gaps that leave people at risk from preventable and treatable illnesses, enable effective disease surveillance, and build sustainable, resilient health systems. In partnership with countries, WHO and other global health agencies, we are driving progress towards global health security and universal health coverage. We are a WHO Collaborating Centre for Laboratory Strengthening and Diagnostic Technology Evaluation. For more information, please visit https://www.unfpa.org

Overlooked no more: Access to TB innovations for children and pregnant women is a must

Unitaid-backed research underpins WHO recommendation for first-ever multidrug-resistant TB prevention regimen for children

Geneva, 21 February 2024 – There is new hope for both children and adults who have been exposed to multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), following a World Health Organization (WHO) communication recommending breakthrough preventive treatments for both populations. Research from Unitaid’s BENEFIT Kids project, led by Stellenbosch University and presented at the Union World Conference in November, underpinned the recommendation for the pediatric regimen.  

MDR-TB is a form of the disease that has developed resistance to two or more of the first-line drugs used against it. Because so few people access appropriate treatment and even fewer get cured, the disease continues to spread. Children are at particular risk – their weaker immune systems make them more vulnerable to infection and difficulties with diagnosis and arduous treatments mean they are more likely to suffer serious outcomes if the infection progresses to disease.  

“Pediatric regimens are typically adapted from adult treatments, meaning the development of child treatments can lag years behind adult interventions. With children at such high risk from multidrug-resistant TB infection, we knew we couldn’t afford to wait,” said Dr Philippe Duneton, Executive Director of Unitaid. “I’m delighted to see the Unitaid-Stellenbosch University commitment to prioritizing children in the TB response has resulted in a life-saving preventive treatment for kids at the same time as the first-ever adult regimen.” 

In addition, the Unitaid-Stellenbosch University program worked concurrently to develop properly dosed, palatable, and easy to swallow formulations of levofloxacin, the key medicine used, which is already available for purchase.  

The WHO’s recommendation paves the way for optimal MDR-TB prevention for children to be rolled out without delay – though funding is urgently needed to support the contact tracing necessary to find children at risk and connect them with care.


About Unitaid:

Unitaid saves lives by making new health products available and affordable for people in low- and middle-income countries. Unitaid works with partners to identify innovative treatments, tests and tools, helps tackle the market barriers that are holding them back, and gets them to the people who need them most – fast. Since it was created in 2006, Unitaid has unlocked access to more than 100 groundbreaking health products to help address the world’s greatest health challenges, including HIV, TB, and malaria; women’s and children’s health; and pandemic prevention, preparedness and response. Every year, these products benefit more than 300 million people. Unitaid is a hosted partnership of the World Health Organization.


Media contacts:

For more information and media requests:

Hervé Verhoosel

Head of Communications and Spokesperson

M: +33 6 22 59 73 54

verhooselh@unitaid.who.int

 

Kyle Wilkinson

Communications Officer

+41 79 445 17 45

wilkinsonk@unitaid.who.int