Highest Number of
diabetes - Linked TB Cases in India : Lancet Report..!
World Diabetes Day November 14
Our country India has
the second largest population of diabetes patients in the world with 3 cr
people diagnosed with the disease
After confronting
multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (TB), India is heading towards a more serious
health threat & medical crisis - diabetes-associated TB.
Our country India has
the highest number of diabetes-linked TB cases, which hamper global efforts to
control & eliminate TB, according to a new study commissioned by The
Lancet.
“Diabetes is making
an increasingly important contribution to the TB epidemic and a 52 % increase
in diabetes prevalence recorded over the last 3 years in the 22 highest TB burden
countries is thought to be responsible for a rise in diabetes-associated TB
cases from 10 % in 2010 to 15 % in 2013,” says the study to be published in the
medical journal this week.
New estimates for a
three-part The Lancet series reveal that the top 10 countries with the highest
estimated number of adult TB cases associated with diabetes are India (3,02,000
cases), China (1,56,000), South Africa (70,000), Indonesia (48,000), Pakistan
(43,000), Bangladesh (36,000), the Philippines (29,000), Russia (23,000),
Myanmar (21,000), and the Democratic Republic of Congo (19,000).
India has the second
largest population of diabetes patients in the world with 3 cr people diagnosed
with the disease - next only to China. The country also has the highest burden
of TB in the world, with an estimated two million new cases surfacing annually.
A rapid increase in the incidence of Type 2 diabetes in low - and middle-income
countries where tuberculosis (TB) is endemic could hamper global efforts to
control and eliminate TB.
Type-2, or non -
insulin-dependent diabetes, is the most common form of the disease. The Lancet
study indicates that 15 % of adult TB cases worldwide are already attributable
to diabetes.
Diabetes-associated
cases number upwards of one million a year, with more than 40 % reported in
India and China alone. If diabetes rates continue to rise out of control, the
present downward trajectory in global TB cases could be offset by 8 % (i.e, 8 %
less reduction) or / more by 2035, the
study warned.
Diabetes increases
the risk of developing active TB, and is associated with a poorer TB prognosis.
Conversely, TB infection worsens glucose control in patients with diabetes.
Thus, as diabetes becomes more common in TB - endemic regions, health care
systems will increasingly be faced with the challenge of a double disease
burden, the study points out.
“These findings
highlight the growing impact of diabetes on TB control in regions of the world
where both diseases are prevalent,” says Knut Lönnroth at the Global TB
Programme at the World Health Organization in Geneva, and the key author of the
series.
“TB control is being
undermined by the growing number of people with diabetes, which is expected to
reach an astounding 592 million worldwide by 2035,” he said in The Lancet note.
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