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India's Health Ministry did not respond to phone calls and written requests for comment Monday and last week. Similar highly resistant cases have been noted before. In 2003, two Italian women died and there were 15 cases reported from Iran in 2009. That same year, The Associated Press reported on a case of a Peruvian teenager who was infected at home but diagnosed while visiting Florida. He was successfully treated for a year and a half with experimental high doses of medicines not typically used for TB, costing about $500,000. Those resources are unthinkable in the developing world, where TB remains a menacing killer and where few hospitals can perform tests to find out which antibiotics might work. "For there to be another report coming out from India is no surprise at all. Indeed, in a sense, it's surprising it's taken so long," said WHO's Nunn. This is "yet another alarm call for countries and others engaged in TB control to do their jobs properly." Tuberculosis is an age-old scourge that lies dormant in an estimated 1 in 3 people. About 10 percent of those people eventually develop active TB, which kills roughly 2 million a year, according to WHO. Each victim infects an average of 10 to 15 others every year, typically through sneezing or coughing. If a TB case is found to be resistant to the two most powerful anti-TB drugs, the patient is classified as having multi drug-resistant TB,
or MDR. An even worse classification of TB -- one the WHO accepts -- is extensively drug-resistant TB,
or XDR, a form of the disease that was first reported in 2006 and is virtually resistant to all drugs. An estimated 20 percent of the world's multi-drug-resistant cases are found in India, which is home to a quarter of all types of tuberculosis cases worldwide. ___ Online: WHO statement: http://bit.ly/zhfbF5
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