TB Historical Timeline

 
 

 

1851one person in four killed by TB in Europe and America.

 

1854 santorium treatment began. Treatment commenced with 24 hours confinement to their bed, with no activity allowed at all. Slowly periods of increasing activity were introduced. Fresh air was advised for patients at all times and in all weathers – many former patients of sanatoria remember being snowed on when their bed had been wheeled out into the open air – some even slept like this! A healthy diet was also promoted.

 

1882 – Robert Koch identifies that TB is caused by an organism, Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

 

1904 – the first charity seal to fundraise for tuberculosis patients introduced in Denmark. America adopted the idea in 1907.

 

1920the first human trials of the vaccine Bacille Calmette Guérin (BCG), an attenuated version of Mycobaterium bovis (Bovine TB).

 

1935 – Pasteurisation of milk introduced in Britain.

 

1944 Drs Schatz, Bugie and Waksman announced the discovery of a drug called 'Streptomycin' and the first patient to be successfully treated with the drug.

 

1952 - Drs Robizek and Selikoff at Seaview Hospital, New York, use a new drug called 'Isoniazid' to treat TB patients.

 

1953 – BCG vaccination introduced in secondary schools in the UK, after the introduction of similar programmes in France and Scandinavia following a survey of 50,000 children which showed an 80% reduction in infection rate. At the time, those most at risk of TB in the UK were young adults in industrialised settings. The USA opts not to use BCG after their research showed contrary conclusions.

 

1960 - Dr John Crofton, a TB expert at the University of Edinburgh, (and now Honorary President of TB Alert) proposed that a combination of drugs, Streptomycin, PAS and Isoniazid made TB completely curable and he declared "all out war" to conquer the disease. His proposals included the pasteurization of milk, tuberculin testing of cattle, BCG vaccinations of whole populations, mass radiography for the early detection of disease, triple therapy for every infected patient, isolation of the infectious until no longer so and reduction in household overcrowding. All this would hopefully be accompanied by a general improvement in the standard of living.

 

1970first outbreak of drug resistant TB in USA.

 

1987 – TB figures in England and Wales at their lowest since records began - 5086 cases - following a downward trend since the beginning of the century.  Since then, figures have increased almost every year (ref: Health Protection Agency, http://www.hpa.org.uk/infections/topics_az/tb/epidemiology/table1.htm )

 

1993 the World Health Organisation declares TB a global emergency, estimating that one third of the world’s population (2 billion people) is latently infected with TB and 7-8 million cases of active TB occur each year. TB is killing more people than any previous year in history.

 

Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course (DOTS), locally known as the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP), introduced in India. DOTS is the only strategy which has proven effective in controlling TB on a mass basis and India carries the burden of the highest number of TB cases in any one country. By 2006 the entire country would be covered by DOTS, see http://www.tbcindia.org/RNTCP.asp and 180 countries would be implementing the DOTS strategy, see http://www.who.int/tb/dots/en/

 

1995the first recorded outbreak of MDR-TB at a London hospital HIV Unit.

 

1999 -TB Alert, the UK’s National Tuberculosis charity founded in 1998, in response to the fact that, despite the rising figures and the World Health Organisation’s statement that TB is a global emergency, there was no dedicated charity in the UK working with TB.

 

2004 – National Action Plan, “Stopping Tuberculosis in England” published by Chief Medical Officer.

 

Nelson Mandela called for stepped up efforts to control tuberculosis, saying the fight against AIDS is incomplete without targeting the lung disease. “TB is too often a death sentence for people with AIDS. It does not have to be this way,” said Mandela, who successfully battled tuberculosis while in prison during the apartheid era.

Tuberculosis is one of the most common diseases that attacks AIDS patients after their immune system has been destroyed by the virus. Many people with HIV die prematurely from TB because they are not treated in time. “The world has made defeating AIDS a top priority. This is a blessing, but TB remains ignored,” said Mandela, at the International AIDS Conference in Thailand.

He noted that mankind had known the cure for TB for more than 50 years. But what had been missing was the “will and the resources to quickly diagnose people with TB and get them the treatment they need. We can’t fight AIDS unless we do much more to fight TB as well.”

 

2005 – Withdrawal of the BCG school vaccination programme in the UK. The programme was replaced by a targeted, risk based strategy. This followed the example of other risk based BCG vaccination programmes in Holland and Germany.  Figures from the Health Protection Agency showed that the pattern of disease in the UK was concentrated within specific groups; the homeless, people with substance misuse issues, prisoners and those coming from countries of high incidence. Research had also shown that BCG had been found to be most effective at preventing the more severe forms of TB in younger children but was not as effective at preventing pulmonary (lung) TB in adults.

 

The World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Committee for Africa comprising health ministers from 46 Member States declared tuberculosis an emergency in the African region - a response to an epidemic that has more than quadrupled the annual number of new TB cases in most African countries since 1990 and is continuing to rise across the continent, killing more than half a million people every year.

 

 

2006

 

January: The Stop TB Partnership launched its Action Plan to Stop Tuberculosis 2006-2015.

 

The Plan aims to cut deaths from TB in half in the next ten years and provide treatment for 50 million people. It requires $56 billion to carry out its aims – less than $1 per day of healthy life gained, with 14 million lives saved by 2015. At the launch of the Plan, which took place at the World Economic Form in Davos, Bill Gates pledged to triple investment through the Gates Foundation, taking the amount committed from $300 million to $900 million. The total funding gap to carry out the Global Plan is estimated at $31 billion.

 

This is the second Global Plan from the Stop TB Partnership. The first, covering 2001-2005, led to the number of patients treated in DOTS programmes being doubled over 5 years, from 2 million in 2000 to 4 million in 2004, as well as a major improvement in case detection – both India and China which between them have 35% of the world’s TB cases are now close to the target of 70%. The new plan, based on WHO’s new Stop Tuberculosis strategy, builds on the first in that it seeks to deliver more on the ground and gives greater emphasis to the issues of HIV/TB co-infection and MDR TB through adapting the use of DOTS.

 

The barriers to stopping the TB are complex and vast and the Plan recognises that these need to be identified and removed. As well as increasing the accessibility of quality anti-TB drugs, the social burdens of the disease for patients also need to be addressed. Equally, health services need to be adequately resourced and committed to eliminating TB. More effective tools are also an aim of the Plan, with targets of diagnostic tests at the point of care by 2012, a safe, effective and affordable vaccine by 2015 and a treatment regime of 1-2 months shortly after 2015.

 

US-Danish non-profit initiative, the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation, started the first laboratory dedicated to improving the TB vaccine. The current BCG vaccine was invented over 80 years ago and is frequently ineffective, especially in people with lowered immunity. Aeras has received a $82.9 million grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for its work.

 

March: The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) publishes “Guidelines for the clinical diagnosis and management of tuberculosis, and measures for its prevention and control” in the UK. See http://www.nice.org.uk/page.aspx?o=CG033&c=infections