Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide. According to the World Health Organization’s Global TB report 2023, 7.5 million people were newly diagnosed with TB in 2022, the highest number since WHO began global TB monitoring in 1995. Despite being preventable and usually curable, TB remained the world’s second leading cause of death from a single infectious agent in 2022, after COVID-19, and caused almost twice as many deaths as HIV/AIDS.
At the same time, drug-resistant strains of the disease remained relatively stable between 2020 and 2022, after a slow downward trend between 2015 and 2019. This, coupled with the long treatment regimens currently required, has brought the urgency for action and investment in TB research even more under the spotlight. For those affected by TB, rapid access to better regimens of shorter treatment duration with fewer side effects is the ultimate goal.
To this end, Tecro Research and the Division of Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine at LMU Klinikum have recently been working together on some TB clinical trials utilizing Viedoc solutions.
Tecro Research, the contract research organization (CRO), is a niche data management and statistical programming provider based in South Africa. Established eight years ago, the partners collectively have almost 50 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry, and a unique combination of skills and knowledge. They have a focus on infectious diseases, with a deep understanding of the very complex labs associated with TB.
The sponsor for the study is the Division of Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine, from the LMU university hospital in Munich, one of the largest healthcare facilities in Germany. The division counts with an ambulatory clinic focused in tropical diseases and travel medicine, and the “tropical institute”, covering different kinds of research in several infectious diseases, such as observational studies and cohorts, as well as interventional studies, including the TB clinical trials.