Our mission is to discover and develop better, faster-acting, and affordable drugs to fight tuberculosis.
The TB Alliance is a product development partnership, or PDP. PDPs build partnerships between the public, private, academic, and philanthropic sectors to drive the development of new products for diseases of poverty. As not-for-profit organizations, PDPs make the products they develop available to those who need them. Through their unique, collaborative efforts, PDPs are able to access a variety of funding sources and apply a wide range of tools and knowledge to their programs.
Click here to find out more about our innovative model.
The TB Alliance is headquartered in New York and has offices in Brussels, Belgium and Pretoria, South Africa, though our work is performed globally through our extensive network of partners. Click here for contact information for all of the TB Alliance offices.
Open positions at the TB Alliance are posted on our website. You can view current job opportunities with the TB Alliance by clicking here.
The TB Alliance accepts individual donations of a one-time or recurring nature. Donations can be made to the TB Alliance online, here.
TB Alliance staff participates in many conferences, scientific symposia, and TB awareness events around the world. If you would like to request the TB Alliance to participate in an upcoming event or symposia, please contact Derek Ambrosino.
The TB Alliance posts its financial statements on its website. The most recent statement can be found on our Publications page. A copy of the printed financial statements will be provided on request.
We do not simply provide grants or awards to academic researchers or to any other party engaged in tuberculosis research. We prefer to enter into research and development collaborations around a particular drug discovery or drug development program where we can partner to advance the development of that program, whether that be an academic or government organization, a biotech or pharmaceutical company or another product development partnership. In addition to funding our own contributions to such a collaboration, we may also agree to fund certain activities to be performed by our partner in the collaboration or the activities to be performed by third parties in support of the collaboration. Please continue reading for information about partnership opportunities.
Preferred attributes of potential anti-TB drugs include:
For more information about partnership opportunities, please contact Gerald Siuta.
We welcome discussions regarding collaboration at any stage of a project. However, we prioritize compounds that we determine to have the greatest likelihood of making a significant impact on the TB burden most quickly. Therefore, chemical series with demonstrated novel mode of action, emerging or developed SAR and/or leads which have demonstrated in vivo proof of concept efficacy are of particular interest.
Contact Gerald Siuta who coordinate the process of opportunity evaluation at TB Alliance.
The TB Alliance may make samples of our compounds available for research purposes. For more information about our requirements and to submit a request, contact Gerald Siuta.
The TB Alliance owns a small collection of proprietary small molecules with activity against TB bacteria. Contact Gerald Siuta to explore opportunities to access this library.
Possibly, but only if the assay is incorporated into a new or existing collaboration with the TB Alliance.
As part of the TB Alliance's virtual strategy, it will partner with various organizations to manufacture and make any new TB drugs available to those that need them. If you are interested in learning more, please contact Elizabeth Gardiner, Vice-President, Market Access.
The TB Alliance's TB drug compounds have not yet been approved for use in humans to treat TB, and therefore we cannot provide experimental drug compounds to any patient outside of clinical trials. At this point, the only way to receive these compounds in development by the TB Alliance is to participate in a clinical trial testing such drug candidates. If you are suffering from TB and your medical needs are not being met, we encourage you to contact your local health provider, national TB treatment program, and your national Ministry of Health.
The TB Alliance conducts clinical trials at many sites throughout the world. The fastest way to get more information about our trials currently enrolling is to log onto clinicaltrials.gov and search for the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development.