Back to Search
Start Over
TMC207: the first compound of a new class of potent anti-tuberculosis drugs
- Source :
- Future Microbiology. 5:849-858
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- Future Medicine Ltd, 2010.
-
Abstract
- Disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis continues as a global epidemic: over 2 billion people harbor latent TB infection, and more than 9 million new TB cases, of whom 500,000 are multidrug-resistant (MDR), and nearly 2 million deaths are estimated to occur each year. New drugs are required to shorten treatment duration of drug-sensitive TB and for the treatment of MDR-TB. TMC207 is a first-in-class diarylquinoline compound with a novel mechanism of action, the inhibition of bacterial ATP synthase, and potent activity against drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB. It has bactericidal and sterilizing activity against M. tuberculosis and other mycobacterial species, but little activity against other bacteria. In a Phase II efficacy study conducted in patients with MDR-TB taking TMC207 plus a standard background regimen, the drug appeared to be safe and well tolerated, and showed significant efficacy after 2 months of treatment with conversion rates of sputum culture of 48% (vs 9% in the placebo group). Given the product development partnership between Tibotec and the TB Alliance, the strategies of using TMC207 in shorter first-line regimens or using it in second-line regimens for drug-resistant M. tuberculosis infections are both being pursued. No clinical data of TMC207 in TB patients with HIV coinfection have been published; drug–drug interaction studies with antiretrovirals are being conducted. Finally, the remarkable sterilizing capacity of TMC207 also makes it an attractive drug in the strategy of TB elimination. Current and future studies will determine the role of TMC207 in a shortened treatment regimen for drug-sensitive TB, a more effective and better-tolerated regimen for MDR-TB, the treatment of latent TB infection, and intermittent-TB treatment regimens.
- Subjects :
- Microbiology (medical)
Drug
medicine.medical_specialty
Tuberculosis
media_common.quotation_subject
Antitubercular Agents
R207910
Disease
Microbiology
Article
Sputum culture
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
TMC207
Anti tuberculosis
Bacterial Proteins
Internal medicine
Diarylquinolines
ATP Synthetase Complexes
Clinical Trials as Topic
Drug Interactions
Humans
Microbial Viability
Quinolines
Treatment Outcome
medicine
media_common
medicine.diagnostic_test
biology
business.industry
medicine.disease
biology.organism_classification
Regimen
Immunology
business
Efficacy Study
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17460921 and 17460913
- Volume :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Future Microbiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d0a758a0b95553ccc184d88c7a961d59
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2217/fmb.10.50