History of ICMR-NIRT

History of ICMR-NIRT

Directors

Dr. N.K. Menon

Dr. N.K. Menon Director 1964 - 1969

Dr. S.P. Tripathy

Dr. S.P. Tripathy Director 1969 - 1983

Dr. R. Prabhakar

Dr. R. Prabhakar Director 1983 - 1995

Dr. C.N. Paramasivan

Dr. C.N. Paramasivan Officer-In-Charge 1995 - 1996

Dr. P.R. Narayanan

Dr. P.R. Narayanan Director 1996 - 2008

Dr.V. Kumaraswami

Dr. V. Kumaraswami Director-In-Charge 2008 - 2010

Dr. Aleyamma Thomas

Dr. Aleyamma Thomas Director-In-Charge 2010 - 2012

Dr. Soumya Swaminathan

Dr. Soumya Swaminathan Director 2012 - 2015

Dr. Sanjay Mehendale

Dr. Sanjay Mehendale Director (Additional Charge) 2015 - 2016

Dr. Srikanth Prasad Tripathy

Dr. Srikanth Prasad Tripathy Director-In-Charge 2016 - 2020

Dr. C. Padmapriyadarsini

Dr. C. Padmapriyadarsini Director 2020 - 2024

Dr. Manoj Murhekar

Dr. Manoj Murhekar Director-In-Charge 2024 - 2025

Dr. Srinath Satyanarayana

Dr. Srinath Satyanarayana Director 2025 - Present

Founders

1956
Establishment of Tuberculosis Chemotherapy Centre

Tuberculosis Chemotherapy Centre was set up in Madras as a five-year project under ICMR, Government of Tamil Nadu, WHO, and BMRC. The objective was to study the mass domiciliary application of chemotherapy for pulmonary TB treatment. Started with 8 international staff from WHO and national staff from ICMR and Tamil Nadu government, led by Dr. Wallace Fox (BMRC).

1961
Threat of Closure & Leadership Change

The Centre faced the threat of closure after its initial five-year period. Dr. Hugh Stott succeeded Dr. Wallace Fox as WHO Senior Medical Officer and led the Centre for the next six years.

1964
Made a Permanent Institute

The Centre was made a permanent establishment under ICMR. Dr. N.K. Menon became the first national Director. WHO staff members were withdrawn as national counterparts were trained.

1965
WHO Staff Withdrawal

The last WHO Bacteriologist and Medical Officer left the Centre.

1966
ICMR Absorbs Staff

The Tamil Nadu government staff working at the Centre were absorbed by ICMR in April. The last WHO Senior Medical Officer left in July. With WHO’s withdrawal, the scientific direction of the research became a national responsibility.

1970
Formation of Scientific Advisory Committee

The last WHO staff member (a laboratory technologist) left in January. A Scientific Advisory Committee was formed, consisting of eminent Indian scientists and TB experts, to guide research.

1976
Establishment of Ethical Committee

An Ethical Committee was constituted in July to ensure ethical standards in clinical trials involving human patients.

1978
Expansion & Renaming as Tuberculosis Research Centre

The Tamil Nadu government granted 1 hectare of land to ICMR on long lease for expansion. The second block (four stories) was built with ICMR funds. The Tuberculosis Chemotherapy Centre was renamed "Tuberculosis Research Centre (TRC)." A subsidiary unit was set up at Lady Wellington Hospital, Bangalore, in collaboration with the National Institute of Tuberculosis.

1983
Relocation of Bangalore Unit to Madurai

The Bangalore unit was relocated to Madurai (Government Rajaji Hospital). The Madurai unit was expanded, and by the 2000s, it had 40 staff members and played a key role in clinical trials.

1995
Clinical Trial on Shortened TB Treatment

TRC initiated a randomized clinical trial testing 3-, 4-, and 5-month TB treatment regimens using ofloxacin.

2000
Establishment of HIV/AIDS Division

A separate HIV/AIDS division was established at TRC. This division conducted clinical trials for managing and preventing tuberculosis in HIV/AIDS patients.

2002
Publication of Clinical Trial Results

Results of the 1995 clinical trial were published. The study showed that TB treatment could be shortened to 4 or 5 months, generating global interest in quinolones for TB.

2006
Golden Jubilee & Inauguration of Clinical Facility

TRC celebrated its Golden Jubilee. A state-of-the-art clinical patient care facility was inaugurated in February. This ₹8.75 crore, 6250 sq. meter, 4-story building had modern facilities such as Digital X-ray, pulmonary labs, emergency rooms, and an HIV laboratory. Advanced infrastructure including fiber-optic broadband, disabled-friendly access, fire detection, and solar-powered water systems were introduced.

2011
Renaming as National Institute for Research in Tuberculosis (NIRT)

TRC was renamed the "National Institute for Research in Tuberculosis (NIRT)."

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