Project details
- Project period
- 1 Jun 2025 - 31 May 2030
- Total cost
- €6 299 756,05
- Global Health EDCTP3 funding
- €5 999 990,75
- Call identifier
- HORIZON_HORIZON-JU-GH-EDCTP3-2024-01-04-two-stage
- Status
- In progress
- Project type
- Research and Innovation Actions (RIA)
- Disease area
- Tuberculosis
- Intervention type
- TherapiesDiagnosticsOther prevention tools
Protecting the potency of a key tuberculosis drug
The TASP project is evaluating new approaches to extend the lifespan of the critical tuberculosis drug, bedaquiline, by improving detection of drug-resistant TB infections, tailoring treatments to drug-resistance profiles, and intensifying treatment for drug-resistant infections.
The challenge
When new antibiotics are introduced, selection pressures favour the survival of microbes that can tolerate their presence. Over time, drugs lose their effectiveness as a higher proportion of microbes become resistant.
Although it has been used for only a few years, there is accumulating evidence that this is the fate of bedaquiline, a novel TB antibiotic that has become the mainstay of treatment for drug-resistant TB infections. The use of bedaquiline has enabled these treatment programmes to be significantly shortened, from 18 months to 6–9 months.
The development of resistance can be delayed by careful use of antibiotics, restricting their use to cases where they are most likely to eliminate TB infections. However, it is currently challenging to determine when TB cases might have reduced sensitivity to bedaquiline, and alternative treatments are preferred.
The project
The TASP project is evaluating a combination of innovative approaches to improve the use of bedaquiline in sub-Saharan Africa to preserve its long-term potency.
The first innovation is to use an intensified TB treatment regimen for patients known to have drug-resistant TB infection or at risk of such infection. During this critical time, patients will be given a combination of six drugs, using high-dose options where possible.
In addition, a novel method (thin-layer agar) will be used to rapidly assess the susceptibility of infections to different TB drugs. While conventional tests can take many weeks to provide such information, this new method should provide results within 2–8 weeks.
The third innovation is to develop and apply an AI decision-support tool that will analyse patient data and infection resistance profiles and recommend the most appropriate treatment option. Extensive expert consultations will be organised to agree on which of the four possible treatment regimens is best suited to patients with different patterns of resistance.
A trial of this strategy will then be organised in Mozambique, Nigeria and South Africa, recruiting patients with an identified bedaquiline- or rifampicin-resistant infection, or who have not responded to rifampicin-based treatment. The trial will focus on treatment success rates, with 60% or higher considered a positive result.
In parallel, the project will work with local stakeholders to co-develop portable air cleaners using local materials. In addition to capturing airborne pathogens, filters could be analysed to monitor the environment for drug-resistant bacterial strains. This approach was successfully applied during the COVID-19 pandemic, and products built with readily available materials appear to be as effective as commercially produced filters.
Impact
The TASP project will generate key evidence on a possible new bedaquiline stewardship strategy. It will:
- Reveal whether initial intensified treatment of suspected drug-resistant tuberculosis infections leads to better clinical outcomes.
- Demonstrate whether drug-susceptibility data generated using the thin-layer agar method can improve patient management and support more rational antibiotic use.
- Show whether an AI-based clinical decision-support tool enhances bedaquiline stewardship.
More judicious use of bedaquiline through this new approach could improve short-term clinical outcomes and extend its lifespan, thereby maintaining its effectiveness for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis infections.
Consortium map
Coordinator
INSTITUUT VOOR TROPISCHE GENEESKUNDE
- Location
- ANTWERPEN, Belgium
- EU contribution
- €1 255 416,25
- Total cost
- €1 555 181,55
Scientific project leader
CENTRE NATIONAL HOSPITALIER DE PNEUMO-PHTISIOLOGIE
Location: Cotonou, Benin
Beneficiaries
CENTRE NATIONAL HOSPITALIER DE PNEUMO-PHTISIOLOGIE
- Location
- Cotonou, Benin
- EU contribution
- €820 698,75
- Total cost
- €820 698,75
UNIVERSITEIT ANTWERPEN
- Location
- Antwerpen, Belgium
- EU contribution
- €71 500,00
- Total cost
- €71 500,00
STICHTING VU
- Location
- Amsterdam, Netherlands
- EU contribution
- €215 625,00
- Total cost
- €215 625,00
UNIVERSITY OF IBADAN
- Location
- Ibadan, Nigeria
- EU contribution
- €736 342,50
- Total cost
- €736 342,50
THE AURUM INSTITUTE NPC
- Location
- Isando, South Africa
- EU contribution
- €878 258,75
- Total cost
- €878 258,75
LAGOS STATE UNIVERISTY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
- Location
- LAGOS, Nigeria
- EU contribution
- €130 520,00
- Total cost
- €130 520,00
UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN
- Location
- Rondebosch, South Africa
- EU contribution
- €434 988,75
- Total cost
- €434 988,75
UPPSALA UNIVERSITET
- Location
- Uppsala, Sweden
- EU contribution
- €124 250,00
- Total cost
- €124 250,00
THE GOVERNING COUNCIL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
- Location
- Toronto, Canada
- EU contribution
- €58 062,50
- Total cost
- €58 062,50
FUNDACAO AURUM
- Location
- MAPUTO, Mozambique
- EU contribution
- €690 781,25
- Total cost
- €690 781,25
UNIVERSITY OF RWANDA
- Location
- Kigali, Rwanda
- EU contribution
- €583 547,00
- Total cost
- €583 547,00
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