| Literature DB >> 15496244 |
Deborah S Yokoe1, Steven W Coon, Rachel Dokholyan, Michael C Iannuzzi, Timothy F Jones, Sarah Meredith, Marisa Moore, Lynelle Phillips, Wayne Ray, Stephanie Schech, Deborah Shatin, Richard Platt.
Abstract
Underreporting tuberculosis (TB) cases can compromise surveillance. We evaluated the contribution of pharmacy data in three different managed-care settings and geographic areas. Persons with more than two anti-TB medications were identified by using pharmacy databases. Active TB was confirmed by using state TB registries, medical record review, or questionnaires from prescribing physicians. We identified 207 active TB cases, including 13 (6%) missed by traditional surveillance. Pharmacy screening identified 80% of persons with TB who had received their medications through health plan-reimbursed sources, but missed those treated solely in public health clinics. The positive predictive value of receiving more than two anti-TB medications was 33%. Pharmacy data also provided useful information about physicians' management of TB and patients' adherence to prescribed therapy. Pharmacy data can help public health officials to find TB cases and assess their management in populations that receive care in the private sector.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15496244 PMCID: PMC3320428 DOI: 10.3201/eid1008.031075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Identification of tuberculosis (TB) cases by using pharmacy screening
| Cases | Plan A (%) | Plan B (%) | Plan C (%) | Total (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total no. dispensed 2 or more anti-TB drugs | 73 | 28 | 143 | 244 |
| Matched to TB registry (previously reported TB cases) | 12 (17) | 6 (21) | 43 (30) | 61 (25) |
| Previously unreported TB cases (verified by record review) | 3 (4) | 1 (4) | 9 (6)a | 13 (5) |
| Not a TB case (verified by record review) | 55 (75) | 7 (25) | 91 (64) | 153 (63) |
| Case status not determined | 3 (4) | 14 (50) | 0 | 17 (7) |
aIncludes two cases not found in the state health department's TB registry but reported to other state health departments.
Reasons for meeting pharmacy screening criteria among persons without active tuberculosis (TB)
| Reasons why non-TB cases met screening criteria | Plan A (%) | Plan B (%) | Plan C (%) | Total (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suspected active TB, full course of therapy | 7 (13) | 0 | 8 (9) | 15 (10) |
| Suspected active TB, empiric therapy discontinued | 12 (22) | 0 | 35 (38) | 47 (31) |
| Treatment of latent TB infection | 8 (14) | 3 (43) | 10 (11) | 21 (14) |
| Other mycobacterial infections | 26 (47) | 4 (57) | 33 (36) | 63 (41) |
| Other or unknown | 2 (4) | 0 | 5 (5) | 7 (4) |
| Total | 55 | 7 | 91 | 153 |
Detecting tuberculosis (TB) cases by using pharmacy screening and state health department TB registries
| Case identification | Plan A (%) | Plan B (%) | Plan C (%) | Total (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmacy screening only | 3 (6) | 1 (5) | 9 (7) | 13 (6) |
| State health department only (all cases) | 38 (72) | 15 (68) | 80 (61) | 133 (64) |
| State health department only (health plan–treated patients) | 16 (52) | 2 (22) | 0a | 18 (19) |
| Both methods | 12 (22) | 6 (27) | 43 (32) | 61 (30) |
| Total (all cases) | 53 | 22 | 132 | 207 |
| Total (health plan–treated patientsb) | 31 | 9 | 52 | 92 |
aExtrapolated from review of a random sample of 28 of the 80 TB cases identified by the state health department and not by pharmacy screening. bExcludes TB patients receiving anti-TB medication from public health clinics; these medications are not included in the health plan pharmacy databases.
Figure 1Sensitivity and positive predictive value (PPV) of pharmacy screening and percentage of tuberculosis (TB) cases detected only by pharmacy screening. *Of 28 members who met pharmacy screening criteria, TB case status was verified for 14. PPV calculation based on total of 14 with verified status. **Health plan–treated patients excludes patients receiving anti-TB medication from public health clinics.
Figure 2Pharmacy-dispensing profiles of tuberculosis (TB) case-patients treated in the health plans and at least partially outside the health plan. Percentage of standard regimen dispensed is plotted against duration of dispensing anti-TB medications for the two groups. A cutoff value of >70 days of medication dispensed from health plan–reimbursed pharmacies identifies all but one of the health plan–treated TB case-patients.