Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, remains a leading cause of death worldwide. Development of antimicrobial resistance is an important risk during TB treatment, due to the lengthy course of antibiotic therapy and associated adverse events, which can lead to poor medical adherence. Thus, there is an urgent unmet clinical need to develop novel therapeutic modalities that are able to control both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB: new drugs that shorten treatment duration and reduce adverse events can improve adherence, and improved treatment outcomes can reduce disease recurrence.
The ITHEMYC project aims to combine current standard of care antibiotics with new immunotherapies as a novel therapeutic strategy. The ITHEMYC project team consists of a multidisciplinary consortium of 11 partners, including two Product Development Partnerships (TBVI, TB-Alliance), eight academic partners with proven immunological expertise and state-of-the-art methodologies and an industrial partner (GSK) involved in vaccine, drug and biomarker R&D for TB. The team will work together to develop immunotherapies by testing (in vitro, in vivo and in silico) several different compounds, such as monoclonal antibodies, therapeutic vaccines, drugs targeting host-pathogen interactions and immunomodulatory compounds for their potential to serve as adjuncts to antibiotic treatments. ITHEMYC aims to efficiently compare promising new treatment regimens and optimize the selection of new TB immunotherapies with the highest clinical potential based on in vitro (Work Package (WP) 1), in vivo (WP2) and in silico (WP3) models available at different partners in the consortium (Fig. 1). In the long term, it is the project’s goal to advance new combined interventions to the clinic in order to improve TB treatment by reducing the duration and toxicity of current antibiotic treatments and relapse rates.