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Tuberculosis claims 1.23M lives in 2024, WHO reports

by Agence France-Presse - AFP

Geneva Nov 12, 2025 - 10:25 pm GMT+3
The logo of the World Health Organization is seen at the WHO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Jan. 28, 2025. (Reuters Photo)
The logo of the World Health Organization is seen at the WHO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Jan. 28, 2025. (Reuters Photo)
by Agence France-Presse - AFP Nov 12, 2025 10:25 pm

Tuberculosis remained the world’s deadliest infectious disease in 2024, claiming an estimated 1.23 million lives, the World Health Organization said Wednesday, warning that recent progress against the disease remains fragile.

Deaths from TB were down three percent from 2023, while cases dropped by nearly two percent, the World Health Organization (WHO) said in its annual overview.

An estimated 10.7 million people worldwide fell ill with TB in 2024: 5.8 million men, 3.7 million women and 1.2 million children.

A preventable and curable disease, tuberculosis is caused by bacteria that most often affects the lungs. It spreads through the air when people with TB cough, sneeze or spit.

Now, TB cases and deaths are both declining "for the first time since the Covid-19 pandemic", which disrupted services, said Tereza Kasaeva, head of the WHO department for HIV, TB, hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections.

"Funding cuts and persistent drivers of the epidemic threaten to undo hard-won gains, but with political commitment, sustained investment, and global solidarity, we can turn the tide and end this ancient killer once and for all," she said.

Funding for the fight against TB has stagnated since 2020.

Last year, $5.9 billion was available for prevention, diagnosis and treatment, way off the target of $22 billion annually by 2027.

Heaviest burden in India

Last year, eight countries accounted for two-thirds of global TB cases.

They were India (25 percent), Indonesia (10 percent), the Philippines (6.8 percent), China (6.5 percent), Pakistan (6.3 percent), Nigeria (4.8 percent), the Democratic Republic of Congo (3.9 percent) and Bangladesh (3.6 percent).

The five major risk factors driving the epidemic are undernutrition, HIV infection, diabetes, smoking and alcohol use disorders.

TB is the leading killer of people with HIV, with last year's death toll standing at 150,000.

In 2024, 8.3 million people were newly diagnosed with TB and accessed treatment.

This is a record high, which the WHO attributed to reaching more of the people who fell ill with the disease.

Last year, treatment success rates rose from 68 percent to 71 percent.

The WHO estimates that timely TB treatment has saved 83 million lives since 2000.

Vaccine research, AI tools

"Declines in the global burden of TB, and progress in testing, treatment, social protection and research are all welcome news after years of setbacks, but progress is not victory," said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

"The fact that TB continues to claim over a million lives each year, despite being preventable and curable, is simply unconscionable."

As for the pipeline of TB tests, treatments and vaccines, as of August this year, 63 diagnostic tests were in development and 29 drugs were in clinical trials.

Some 18 candidate vaccines are being tested on humans, including six in Phase III, the final stage before regulatory approval.

The BCG vaccine has long been part of routine childhood immunisation programmes in many countries.

But despite TB's devastating global impact, no new vaccines have been licensed in over a century, and there are no vaccines for adults.

Peter Sands, head of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, said: "We now have shorter, more effective treatment regimens, improved prevention strategies, and cutting-edge diagnostics, including AI-powered tools that can detect TB faster and more accurately than ever before," he said.

"These innovations are transforming how we fight TB, especially in resource-limited settings."

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