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Study Suggests Experimental Cancer Drug Could Streamline Standard Tuberculosis Treatment and Prevent Post-TB Lung Disease

An experimental drug now in clinical trials as a cancer treatment could help boost the power of first-line tuberculosis (TB) treatments by helping infected cells die a gentler death, Johns Hopkins Medicine investigators report, based on mouse-model research of the lung-damaging disease. Findings from the study, funded by the National Institutes of Health and published in Nature Communications, could lead to more effective and less onerous therapies that reduce lung damage in TB survivors. It could also prevent lung dysfunction long after treatment completion, which is increasingly recognized as post-TB lung disease that affects tens of millions of TB patients.
“Current treatment regimens for TB are lengthy, expensive and leave patients vulnerable to relapse and lung scarring. Our research shows that adding in a host-directed therapy has extraordinary promise to solve these problems,” says study senior author Sanjay Jain, M.D., a pediatric infectious diseases specialist at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center and professor of pediatrics in the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Although preventable and treatable, TB has again likely become the leading cause of death globally, with an estimated 1.25 million deaths and 10.8 million new cases in 2023, according to the World Health Organization. Hundreds of thousands of these infections are resistant to gold-standard antibiotic treatments, complicating patients’ recovery.
TB is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a type of bacterial species. In early stages, infected lung cells limit spread through apoptosis, a natural and tightly regulated molecular process that causes them to die. In contrast, later-stage TB infections cause uncontrolled necrosis, a different type of cell death that leads to widespread inflammation and damage to surrounding tissue. While apoptosis could be compared to controlled demolition of a building, Jain explains, necrosis is more like destruction by a bomb.
The TB-causing bacterium tilts the balance away from apoptosis and toward necrosis by prompting infected “host cells” to produce Bcl-2, a family of anti-apoptotic proteins. This hijack of a typically healthy molecular pathway has significant advantages for M. tuberculosis, says Medha Singh, Ph.D., the study’s first author and a pediatric infectious diseases fellow in the school of medicine, promoting necrotic niches within the lung that prevent immune system attacks and allow the bacteria to multiply.
Although previous research has suggested inhibiting Bcl-2 as a strategy to fight TB, this host-directed therapy – aimed at infected host cells, rather than the infective bacteria – had never been tested using a real-world TB treatment, Singh says.
To do that in their study, the researchers began treating mice exposed to M. tuberculosis with the antibiotics rifampin, isoniazid and pyrazinamide (RHZ), considered the standard treatment for TB worldwide. In addition, they gave some of the mice navitoclax, a Bcl-2 inhibitor currently in clinical trials to treat cancer by accelerating programmed cell death.
Compared to mice that only received RHZ, those that also received navitoclax had a 40% reduction in necrotic lesions in their lungs, and the infection was less likely to spread to other organs such as the spleen over four weeks of treatment. Imaging in live animals using clinically translatable positron emission tomography (PET) technologies for apoptosis and fibrosis showed that the addition of navitoclax doubled the amount of pulmonary apoptosis and reduced lung scarring by 40% compared to standard TB treatments alone, says Laurence Carroll, Ph.D., a study author and assistant professor of radiology in the school of medicine. Although navitoclax had no effect alone on M. tuberculosis, animals that received the drug along with RHZ decreased their bacterial burden 16 times more effectively.
These results suggest that navitoclax could offer similar effects for TB patients as well as patients with other chronic bacterial infections, such as Staphylococcus aureus and non-TB mycobacteria highly prevalent in the U.S., Jain says. He adds that this idea would need to be tested in clinical trials, ideally with the help of new PET imaging approaches developed at the Johns Hopkins Center for Infection and Inflammation Imaging Research, where he serves as director, that could provide early readouts of the host-directed therapy and visualize lung scarring. If those trials are successful, he says, doctors might eventually add navitoclax or similar drugs to the standard antibiotic regimen, which could shorten the typical daily six-month course of treatment, reduce the incidence of lung scarring or post-TB lung disease, and improve outcomes for patients with drug-resistant TB.
Reference:
Singh, M., Sarhan, M.O., Damiba, N.N.L. et al. Proapoptotic Bcl-2 inhibitor as potential host directed therapy for pulmonary tuberculosis. Nat Commun 16, 3003 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-58190-x.
Dr Kamal Kant Kohli-MBBS, DTCD- a chest specialist with more than 30 years of practice and a flair for writing clinical articles, Dr Kamal Kant Kohli joined Medical Dialogues as a Chief Editor of Medical News. Besides writing articles, as an editor, he proofreads and verifies all the medical content published on Medical Dialogues including those coming from journals, studies,medical conferences,guidelines etc. Email: drkohli@medicaldialogues.in. Contact no. 011-43720751