Advancing Collaborative TB Innovation to Tackle Drug Resistance

By João L. Carapinha

March 24, 2026

Collaborative TB Innovation is essential to ending the world’s deadliest infectious disease. Tuberculosis (TB) still claims millions of lives each year, with rising drug resistance, climate-driven migration, and conflict severely undermining global progress. While the burden falls heaviest on low-income countries, the European Union is also feeling the impact through increased migration, strained health systems, and disrupted supply chains. On World TB Day 2026, this article highlights that defeating TB demands coordinated global action and showcases the pharmaceutical industry’s dedication to developing novel, effective, better-tolerated, and affordable treatments — especially for multi-drug-resistant TB.

Partnerships That Speed Up Drug Discovery

As outlined in a recent EFPIA guest post, structured public-private partnerships can dramatically shorten development timelines for new TB therapies. Through the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) AMR Accelerator and the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP), several consortia are working together to discover, optimise, and clinically test promising candidates.

ERA4TB, UNITE4TB, and TRIC-TB exemplify this new collaborative model. These initiatives bring together EFPIA companies such as GSK, Janssen, and Otsuka with leading academic institutions and organisations like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and TB Alliance. By aligning efforts from the earliest stages, they are advancing multiple compounds toward clinical evaluation while designing combination regimens specifically suited for high-burden, resource-limited settings.

Smart Funding Models Driving Real Progress

These ambitious programmes are made possible through innovative blended financing. The three major IMI AMR Accelerator projects — ERA4TB, TRIC-TB, and UNITE4TB — are supported by the Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 Joint Undertaking, combining European Union Horizon 2020 funding with substantial contributions from EFPIA member companies. Additional support comes from the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development, the Gates Foundation, and national research bodies.

This shared-risk funding approach is deliberately designed to pool expertise, align priorities, and accelerate the delivery of affordable new treatments. The same collaborative spirit is evident in the EDCTP-funded EX-DR TB project, which focuses on solutions for extensively drug-resistant TB, an area with currently very limited treatment options.

Why This Matters for Global Health Policy and Economics

The success of these platforms carries important lessons for health economics, market access, and global health policy. By compressing development timelines for complex therapies targeting drug-resistant TB, collaborative TB innovation offers a replicable model for areas of high medical need but limited commercial return.

This raises critical questions about how to measure the true value of such partnerships, how to incorporate health equity and affordability into traditional evaluation frameworks, and how to design reimbursement mechanisms that reflect the global public good nature of new TB treatments. As drug resistance and cross-border health threats continue to grow, sustained industry-policy collaboration will be vital to delivering the next generation of solutions.

Reference url

Recent Posts

Serplulimab Lung Cancer Treatment: Evaluation of Clinical and Economic Impact in Portugal
Serplulimab lung cancer treatment has received a positive funding recommendation from Portuguese authorities for first-line use in extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC), despite not demonstrating added therapeutic value over the current standard. No Added Therapeutic Value...
Cost-Effectiveness of T1D Screening Effectiveness in Canadian Children

By João L. Carapinha

March 23, 2026

T1D screening effectiveness in the general population substantially outperforms targeted approaches based on family history or genetic risk, according to a new Canadian health economic analysis. General population autoantibody screening detects far more at-risk children than family-history or gen...
Novartis Acquires Mutant-Selective PI3Kα Inhibitor to Enhance Breast Cancer Treatment Options
Novartis has agreed to acquire SNV4818, a pan-mutant-selective PI3Kα inhibitor from Synnovation Therapeutics, targeting PIK3CA mutations...