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Elsevier, Tuberculosis, 1(91), p. 65-66

DOI: 10.1016/j.tube.2010.10.001

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The devil’s advocacy: When and why inhaled therapies for tuberculosis may not work

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Factors that are inimical to the success of inhaled therapies for tuberculosis (TB) include: (i) lack of access of inhaled therapies to poorly-aerated areas of the tubercular lung; (ii) limited ability to penetrate biofilms formed by extracellular bacilli; (iii) selection for resistant bacilli on account of administration of low doses of anti-TB agents; (iv) induction of inflammation and/or immunopathology in the airways and lungs; and (v) anomalies in antigen processing and presentation of vaccines delivered to the lungs. Further, the claim that inhaled therapies rescue alternatively-activated macrophages may not be applicable to all individuals. Fortunately, there are ways and means to address each of the above factors.