By Dr. Tefera Azigew, MD, MPhil, PhD | APOPO Head of TB
Tuberculosis (TB) is both preventable and curable, yet it remains the world’s leading infectious killer. Each year, it claims more lives than any other infectious disease, including HIV and malaria. On March 24, World TB Day highlights the progress achieved as well as the challenges that remain. Since 2000, global efforts have saved an estimated 83 million lives. Even so, TB continues to affect a vast portion of the world’s population, with serious consequences for health, livelihoods, and economies. This year’s theme, “Yes! We can end TB: Led by countries, powered by people,” reflects both urgency and possibility. It underlines that ending TB is achievable, but only with strong national leadership and sustained collective action. If TB is preventable and curable, why does it remain such a global threat? The answer lies in a set of persistent gaps. Millions of people with TB are never diagnosed or are diagnosed too late. Access to fast, accurate testing is still uneven, particularly in resource-constrained settings. TB is also closely linked to malnutrition, poverty, overcrowding, and limited access to healthcare, which makes it harder to control. In addition, treatment requires a long course of antibiotics, and interruptions can lead to drug-resistant TB, which is more difficult and costly to treat. These gaps define the challenge in 2026.
Progress made
There has been meaningful progress in recent years. In 2024, according to the WHO an estimated 10.7 million people fell ill with TB, and 1.23 million died. While the burden remains high, improvements in detection and treatment have helped reduce the number of people missed by health systems. An estimated 2.4 million cases went undiagnosed or unreported, a significant improvement compared to 4 million in both 2020 and 2021, and below pre-pandemic levels.
- Tanzania has transitioned from a highly endemic to an endemic TB category between 2015 and 2024
- Ethiopia is no longer listed among the 30 high MDR/RR-TB burden countries
At the same time, TB notification rates in both these countries have been declining by around 5 percent annually. Global innovation is also moving forward. The World Health Organization (WHO) is calling for accelerated rollout of near point-of-care molecular diagnostic tests, alongside new approaches such as tongue swabs and sputum pooling to improve access and efficiency. Together, these developments signal real momentum.
Gaps remaining
Despite this progress, the pace of change is still not sufficient to meet global targets. By 2025, TB incidence and deaths, compared to 2015, had declined by 12 percent and 29 percent respectively, well short of the 50 percent and 75 percent targets set under the End TB Strategy. The most critical gap remains detection. Millions of people with TB are still missed each year, allowing the disease to spread. According to the WHO, one person with active pulmonary TB can infect 10 to 15 others annually. Delayed or missed diagnosis therefore has a direct impact on transmission.
APOPO’s contribution to closing the gaps
- Screened 1,063,650 sputum samples from 682,958 individuals in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Mozambique
- Identified 35,797 additional TB cases, over smear or Xpert MTB/RIF Ultra-based diagnostic algorithms, that were initially missed by routine screening
- Helped avert an estimated 384,009 potential infections, based on WHO transmission estimates
Each additional case detected represents not only a life changed, but a potential chain of transmission interrupted.
Innovation and evidence
The path forward
In 2026, the focus is increasingly on scaling what works and investing in new solutions. APOPO is expanding both its operational reach and research efforts:
- Geographic expansion in Tanzania, with operations now extended to four additional regions: Kilimanjaro, Arusha, Manyara, and Tanga
- 40 new health facilities integrated into the detection network
- A new collaboration in Uganda with the Mildmay Research Centre, with plans to initiate operations in 2026
- Continued research into non-sputum sample types, including sebum, urine, and breath, which are less invasive and more suitable for children
- Ongoing collaboration with the University of Manchester and other partners, including work involving “living biosensor” Joy Milne
You can adopt TB-detection rat Tamasha and contribute towards ending TB.
APOPO is deeply grateful for the support and generosity of our partners and donors over the years including the health authorities in the countries it works.