Vietnam: Scientists team up to eradicate TB
Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - A team of 23 scientists from different hospitals and institutes has conducted a massive scientific research project to help control tuberculosis (TB).
They have saved the lives of thousands who suffered from
multidrug-resistant and super-multidrug-resistant TB
patients.
The project on research and application of advanced techniques
in respiratory diseases diagnosis and treatment in Vietnam, by
associate professor Nguyen Viet Nhung, director of the National
Lung Hospital and 22 co-authors received the Ho Chi Minh
award.
The project includes 23 sub-researches.
The research results have been applied over three years to solve
very difficult respiratory problems in Vietnam.
They applied advanced techniques for TB screening, early
diagnosis and detection in the community.
It helped treat TB 44% faster than earlier methods.
"It is proof of the feasibility of the goal of ending TB
globally," Nhung said.
The project's results have inspired the global TB community with
a breakthrough 2X (X-ray and Xpert) screening strategy to
improve TB detection.
The 2X screening strategy was implemented quickly due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, but it diagnosed and further treated 2,854 TB
patients in the community.
The proportion of TB patients detected is 1,248 per 100,000
people, much higher than the estimated national rate of 322 per
100,000.
Nhung said that dozens of studies drew up the model over many
years. It gave Vietnam the position of a leading country and
proposed to the World Health Organization (WHO) strategic
advisory council to spread the model on a global scale.
The successful application of advanced techniques for screening,
early diagnosis and development of new TB treatment has reduced
the burden of TB in Vietnam with a reduction of 4.5% per year
compared to 1.5% per year globally.
The death rate in 2020 has decreased by 34% compared to 2015.
The reduction of TB disease in the past ten years has saved 8.7
trillion VND (354.2 million USD), equivalent to preventing
284,000 new TB patients if no preventive measures were taken.
First time
Associate professor Nhung said the project's speciality was that
it established a lot of "first times".
The project was conducted all over the country, with hundreds of
thousands of people joining from central to local levels. It was
the first time they carried out research with a large sample
scale of nearly 100,000 people.
For the first time in Vietnam, after 40 years of TB treatment
history, the group has successfully researched and set up a
four-month TB treatment period, which was an important step to
ending TB globally.
Shortening the treatment time to only two-thirds of the current
period reduced the risk of serious side effects and improved
treatment quality.
From this project, said Nhung, for the first time in Vietnam, a
lung lobe transplant from a live donor was successful with
favourable anti-rejection treatment results.
Even in countries with a developed medical system, monitoring
and treating transplant rejection complications after lung
transplantation can be difficult. Despite this, more than four
years after the lung transplant, the patient's health is still
stable.
"The research's success has put Vietnam on the world system of a
lung transplant, bringing our country's respiratory technology
to a new level. Lung transplants can be applied in many
hospitals nationwide," said Nhung.
During the peak period of the H5N1 outbreak in 2004-06, thanks
to comprehensive diagnostic, treatment and prevention
procedures, Vietnam successfully controlled H5N1 disease with a
mortality rate of 39% compared to 61% in the world.
The results of the studies have supplied advice to the
Government and the Ministry of Health to issue effective health
policies, providing patients with a comprehensive lung health
care system from the central to the grassroots level.
It plans strategies and national action plans for ending TB.
The work has made important contribution to promoting the end of
TB in Vietnam, which WHO and the international medical community
highly appreciate.
Source:
VietnamPlus