Will personalised medicine be the key to eradicating TB? Authors Pere-Joan Cardona Experimental Tuberculosis Unit, Germans Trias i Pujol Health Sciences Research Institute, Barcelona Archivel Farma, Barcelona Abstract Every year, 2 million people die from tuberculosis. Nearly one third of the world's population is already infected, and 10 % of this group will go on to develop TB. The two basic goals of TB treatment are the avoidance of resistance and the treatment of all bacilli populations. But the appearance of multiple drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) and extensively drug resistant TB (XDR-TB) strains is becoming an increasingly troublesome issue, and because treatments have to be prolonged, and enormous burden for health systems. From this perspective, personalised medicine can improve the treatment of patients with TB. By using genetic testing to detect specific polymorphisms and identify patients that best respond to the available drugs, and to consider therapeutic alternatives for those who are not. Further research for biomarkers will support personalised medicine in the treatment of infectious diseases, especially TB, where we are already confronted with the many limitations of the currently available treatments.Keywords: personalised medicine ∙ multiple drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) ∙ extensively drug resistant TB (XDR-TB) ∙ directly observed therapy- short course (DOTS) ∙ SLCO1B1 gene polymorphism ∙ LTA4H gene polymorphisms Downloads PDF Issue Vol. 8 No. 2 (2012) Section Global Implications of Personalised Medicine License This work is subject, unless the contrary is indicated in the text, the photographs or in other illustrations, to an Attribution —Non-Commercial— No Derivative Works 3.0 Creative Commons License, the full text of which can be consulted at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/. You are free to share, copy, distribute and transmit the work provided that the author is credited and reuse of the material is restricted to non-commercial purposes only and that no derivative works are created from the original material.