| Literature DB >> 22908877 |
Alan Brooks1, Thomas A Smith, Don de Savigny, Christian Lengeler.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is unclear how long it takes for health interventions to transition from research and development (R&D) to being used against diseases prevalent in resource-poor countries. We undertook an analysis of the time required to begin implementation of four vaccines and three malaria interventions. We evaluated five milestones for each intervention, and assessed if the milestones were associated with beginning implementation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22908877 PMCID: PMC3495221 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1New interventions: From R&D to implementation (illustrative). *Drugs, Vaccines Diagnostics, Reproductive health supplies. **WHOPES: WHO Pesticide Evaluation Scheme
Figure 2Frost and Reich’s (2008) access framework. The figure presents access as depending on a coordinating architecture that ensures that availability, affordability and adoption considerations are addressed for an intervention. Architecture: Organizational structures and relationship established with the purpose of coordinating and steering the availability, affordability, and adoption activities. Availability: Logistics of making, ordering, shipping, storing, distributing, and delivering a new health technology to ensure it reaches the hands (or mouths) of the end-user. Affordability: Ensuring that health technologies and related services are not too costly for the people who need them. Adoption: Gaining acceptance and creating demand for a new health technology from global organizations, government actors, providers and dispensers, and individual patients. The concept of “acceptability” is inherent in “End-User Adoption and Appropriate Use” but was made explicit in the graphic above to illustrate this framework’s consistency with the work of other authors. Reproduced under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License [8]
Considerations affecting access to new interventions
| Availability & Affordability | Design of interventions specifically for the needs of DCs
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| Adoption | Clinical studies to address questions unique to DCs
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| | Requirements for international policy recommendations
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| | Preparing for country decision-making processes
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| Coordinated action | Coordination between stakeholders
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| Availability | Alignment of intervention with the unique needs of developing country health systems
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| | Forecasting and manufacturing plans incorporating DCs,
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| | Adapted procurement mechanisms
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| Affordability | Affordability, financing, & cost-effectiveness
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| Adoption | Research aligned with policy-maker needs, including burden of disease addressed by an intervention
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| | Importance of international technical consensus and recommendations, including influence of neighboring countries
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| Strengthened national processes, acceptability, and/or governance
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Legend: Pubmed and Web of Science® databases were searched for full names or abbreviations of hepatitis B, Haemophilus influenzae type B, pneumococcal conjugate, rotavirus, insecticide-treated net, rapid diagnostic test, or artemisinin-based combination therapies AND (malaria or vaccin*) AND (develop* OR decision* OR policy* OR adopt* OR implement*).
Characteristics of countries included in the analysis and summary of responses
| 193 | 50 | 46 | 54 | 40 | 3 | 180 (93%) | 13 | 0 | |
| 193 | 50 | 46 | 54 | 40 | 3 | 163 (84%) | 30 | 0 | |
| 193 | 50 | 46 | 54 | 40 | 3 | 30 (16%) | 163 | 0 | |
| 193 | 50 | 46 | 54 | 40 | 3 | 61 (32%) | 132 | 0 | |
| 104 | 4 | 21 | 39 | 40 | 0 | 89 (86%) | 0 | 15 | |
| 104 | 4 | 21 | 39 | 40 | 0 | 40 (38%) | 6 | 58 | |
| 104 | 4 | 21 | 39 | 40 | 0 | 63 (61%) | 12 | 29 |
Hypothesized access milestones for each intervention
| 1982 | 1986 | 1996 | 2000 | n/a | 1992 | |
| 1988 | 1998 | 1997 | 2000 | 1998 | 2006 | |
| 2006 | 2003 | 2008 | 2007 | 2007 | 2009 | |
| 2000 | 2003 | 2009 | 2007 | n/a | 2007 | |
| 1991 | 1998 | 2001 | 2002 | 1995 | 2007 | |
| 1995 | 2003 | n/a | 2002 | 2006 | 2010 | |
| 1999 | 1999 | 2009 | 2002 | 2002 | 2006 |
Legend.
Data sources below relate to the column number for each intervention. Websites were accessed on April 14, 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Hepatitis B vaccine: Regulatory approval) [58]; A) [59]; B) Personal communication, Marie-Claude Dubois, April 11, 2011; C) [60]; D) n/a; E) [61].
type b vaccine: Regulatory approval) [43]; A) [62]; B) Personal communication, Marie-Claude Dubois, April 11, 2011; C) [63]; D-E) [43].
Rotavirus vaccine : Regulatory approval) [54]; A) [64]; B) [65]; C) [66]; D-E) [43].
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine: Regulatory approval) [43]; A) [64]; B) [67]; C) [66]; D) n/a; E) [43].
Insecticide-treated mosquito net: Regulatory approval) [49]; A) [68]; B) [50]; C) [69]; D) [70]; E) [51].
Rapid diagnostic test: Regulatory approval) [71]; A) [8,72]; B) n/a; C) [69]; D) [73]; E) [72].
Artemisinin-based combination therapy: Regulatory approval) [74]; A) [75]; B) [76,77]; C) [69]; D) [74]; E) [78].
Percentage of LICs and LMICs implementing interventions after 5, 10, and 15 years
| | ||||||
| 0% | 6% | 3% | 24% | 10% | 41% | |
| 0% | 0% | 3% | 0% | 15% | 26% | |
| 0% | 15% | -- | -- | -- | -- | |
| 0% | 0% | 5% | 13% | -- | -- | |
| 3% | 5% | 30% | 33% | 95% | 72% | |
| 0% | 3% | 10% | 15% | -- | -- | |
| 18% | 15% | 70% | 56% | -- | -- | |
| 0% | 5% | 4% | 12% | -- | -- | |
| 7% | 8% | 37% | 35% | -- | -- | |
| 3% | 6% | 20% | 24% | -- | -- | |
Legend.
LIC = Low-income countries; LMIC = Lower-middle-income countries.
Figure 3Proportion of implementing countries over time in each income category, stratified by intervention. The figure presents the proportion of countries implementing each intervention by year since regulatory approval. Panel A = High income countries; B = Upper middle income countries; C = Lower middle income countries; D = Low income countries. Color code: Hepatitis B vaccine (HepB) = Blue; Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine (Hib) = Dark red; Rotavirus vaccine (RV) = Green; Pneumococcal vaccine (PC) = Purple; Artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) = Light red; Insecticide-treated mosquito net (ITN) = Orange; Rapid diagnostic test (RDT) = Black
Mean number of years (range) until countries began implementation, by income group
| 13.3 (1–25) | 16.9 (6–24) | 16.0 (1–26) | 21.2 (8–27) | 16.7 (1–27) | |
| 9.0 (3–17) | 14.3 (8–23) | 17.5 (11–22) | 18.8 (10–22) | 14.6 (3–23) | |
| 15.0 (14–16) | 12.9 (4–18) | 11.7 (1–18) | 12.2 (5–16) | 12.2 (1–18) |
Legend.
The table shows data only for the three interventions which more than 80% of all countries (HepB, Hib), or malaria-endemic countries (ITNs), have begun to implement.
Figure 4Beginning implementation of each intervention by countries, by income group, including hypothesized milestones. Panels A-G present the proportion of countries beginning to implement each intervention by year since the year of regulatory approval. Panel A = Hepatitis B vaccine; B = Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine; C = Rotavirus vaccine; D = Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine; E = Insecticide-treated mosquito net; F = Rapid diagnostic test; and G = Artemisinin-based combination therapy. For vaccines, countries are stratified according to World Bank income groups: High = Blue dotted line; Upper‐ middle = Red short dashed line; Lower‐ middle = Green long dashed line; Lower = Purple line. Malaria-endemic countries are stratified by low income versus all other endemic countries. LICs = Purple line; Other endemic countries = Red dash and dot line. Year of regulatory approval (year 0) is provided in the bottom left hand corner of each panel. Ar indicates establishment of a group providing coordination (i.e. architecture). II indicates availability of an improved intervention better aligned with the needs of developing countries. Fi indicates year of a global financing commitment, such as through GAVI or GFATM. IR indicates year of initial WHO recommendation. CR indicates year of comprehensive (e.g. global) WHO recommendation
Relative rates of beginning implementation by intervention and country income (Cox proportional hazard)
| 0.81 | (0.60-1.08) | |
| 1.99 | (0.85-4.66) | |
| 1.18 | (0.70-1.98) | |
| 0.96 | (0.68-1.34) | |
| 0.54 | (0.33-0.88) | |
| 2.41 | (1.38-4.21) | |
| 0.51 | (0.40-0.64) | |
| 0.56 | (0.44-0.70) | |
| 0.52 | (0.41-0.67) |
Legend.
Rates of beginning implementation are calculated relative to the rate of beginning HepB implementation in high income countries in the absence of any of the facilitating milestones. All likelihood ratio statistics (interventions having 6 degrees of freedom and income groups having 3) testing these effects were highly significant, with P < 0.001.
Figure 5Time from regulatory approval to WHO recommendation and financing, by intervention. Interventions are presented from earliest to most recent year of regulatory approval. The year of regulatory approval and intervention name are indicated below each set of bars. Dark blue bars indicate the number of years to an initial recommendation, when relevant, while light blue bars indicate the number of years to a comprehensive recommendation. Green bars indicate the number of years to a financing commitment
Effects of hypothesized access milestones on rate of beginning implementation (Cox proportional hazard)
| 1.20 | (0.74-1.95) | 0.6 | 0.5 | |
| 0.85 | (0.59-1.22) | 0.8 | 0.4 | |
| 1.24 | (0.88-1.75) | 1.5 | 0.2 | |
| 1.97 | (1.33-2.94) | 11.2 | <0.001 | |
| 0.45 | (0.31-0.64) | 19.1 | <0.001 |
Legend.
Adoption rates are calculated relative to the rate of adoption of HepB vaccine in high income countries.
Figure 6Effect of time since regulatory approval on rate of beginning implementation. The vertical axis shows the rate of beginning implementation (i.e. adoption) of interventions according to the number of years since regulatory approval. All interventions are included, except where too few countries were relevant to the analysis, as noted below. The grey area indicates the 95% confidence region around the result. A. High income countries only. Analysis includes all interventions except those against malaria. B. Low income countries only. Analysis includes all interventions except rotavirus vaccination
Figure 7Proposed access framework incorporating R&D and implementation periods. The area in grey represents the original access framework as shown in Figure 2. Other areas are new to the framework. Actions that take place during the R&D period are described in the space above the black strip, “Regulatory Approval”, while actions carried out in the decision and implementation period are described in the space below. Area in grey is reproduced under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License [8]