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Open Access Introducing new and repurposed TB drugs: the endTB experience

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In 2015, the initiative Expand New Drug Markets for TB (endTB) began, with the objective of reducing barriers to access to the new and repurposed TB drugs. Here we describe the major implementation challenges encountered in 17 endTB countries. We provide insights on how national TB programmes and other stakeholders can scale-up the programmatic use of new and repurposed TB drugs, while building scientific evidence about their safety and efficacy. For any new drug or diagnostic, multiple market barriers can slow the pace of scale-up. During 2015–2019, endTB was successful in increasing the number of patients receiving new and repurposed TB drugs in 17 countries. The endTB experience has many lessons, which are relevant to country level introduction of new TB drugs, as well as non-TB drugs and diagnostics. For example: the importation of TB drugs is possible even in the absence of registration; emphasis on good clinical monitoring is more important than pharmacovigilance reporting; national guidelines and expert committees can both facilitate and hinder innovative practice; clinicians use new and repurposed TB drugs when they are available; data collection to generate scientific evidence requires financial and human resources; pilot projects can drive national scale-up.

Keywords: MDR-TB; XDR-TB; bedaquiline; clofazimine; delamanid; linezolid

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Partners In Health (PIH), Brigham and Women´s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA 2: Interactive Research and Development (IRD) Global, Singapore 3: Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Paris, France 4: IRD, Karachi, Pakistan 5: Field Epidemiology Department, Epicentre, Paris, France 6: Ministry of Health, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 7: Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, PIH, Boston, MA, USA 8: MSF, Amsterdam, Holland 9: IRD, Dhaka, Bangladesh 10: MSF, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan 11: MSF, Yerevan, Armenia 12: MSF, Yangon, Myanmar 13: IRD, Durban, South Africa 14: MSF, Tbilisi, Georgia 15: MSF, Geneva, Switzerland 16: Socios En Salud, Lima, Perú 17: IRD, Jakarta, Indonesia 18: PIH, Nur Sultan, Kazakhstan 19: PIH, Maseru, Lesotho 20: Programme national de Lutte contre la Tuberculose, Ministère de la Santé Publique et de la Population, Port-au-Prince, Haiti 21: MSF, Minsk, Belarus 22: Groupe Haitien d´Etudes du Sarcome de Kaposi et des Infections Opportunistes, Port-au-Prince, Haiti 23: MSF, Nairobi, Kenya

Publication date: 01 October 2020

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