A PhD student from University of Ilorin,
Misitura Lawal-Arowona, has made history for inventing anti-tuberculosis metal
drug to cut the death of around 1.6 million people that die from tuberculosis
yearly mostly from India and Africa.
The University of Ilorin Bulletin, on
Monday, stated that the student, who is being supervised by Prof. Joshua
Obaleye, former Dean, Faculty of Science of Unilorin, was currently undergoing
a sandwich fellowship at the Faculty of Science of The Maharaja Sayajirao
University, Vadodara, India.
According to the News Agency of Nigeria,
the metal attached anti-TB drug developed by Arowona has improved the
efficiency of the anti-TB drugs compared to normal drugs that are consumed
globally.
It said Nigeria was among the 14 high burden
countries for TB, TB/HIV and multi-drug resistant TB.
“The country is ranked seventh among the 30
high TB burden countries and second in Africa and the problem of TB in Nigeria
has been made worse by the issues of drug-resistant TB and the HIV/AIDS.
“It is estimated that about 407, 000 people
in Nigeria have TB in a year,” it said.
The publication explained that Arowona, who
is in Vadodara for a year-long project, said, “Earlier studies have proved that
when a metal is attached with a pharmaceutical, it increases the efficacy of
the drug.
“Taking a cue from cisplatin, an anti-cancer
drug, whose efficacy improved after applying platinum as metal, the scholar
worked on multiple metal-based drugs to see whether the efficiency of anti-TB
drugs can be increased by attaching metals to it”.
Also quoting a Professor of Chemistry,
Rajendrasinh Jadeja, of Sayajirao University, India, the Nigerian scholar used
metals-like ion, cobalt, copper and zinc to prepare the metallodrugs.
The don stated, “The drugs, which have been
developed, include ciprofloxacin HCl, ofloxacin, pyrazinamide and moxifloxacin
HCl. Presently, there is no metal-based anti-TB drug available in the market.
“When we compared the metallodrugs with the
original anti-TB drugs, the metallodrugs were more effective. We did an
in-vitro test against bacteria. The metals we have chosen are non-harmful to
human beings. Also, we found that of all the metallodrugs, the copper complex
of ciprofloxacin is most effective.”
The bulletin stated that Arowona was pursuing
her research at MSU under fellowship sponsored by the Italy-based World Academy
of Sciences and the Department of Biotechnology, Government of India.
“The scholar had her B.Sc and M.Sc
(Chemistry) from the University of Ilorin. She has to her credit many journals published
locally and internationally,” it said..
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