| Literature DB >> 26162352 |
A D Harries1, A M V Kumar2, S Satyanarayana2, Y Lin3, R Zachariah4, K Lönnroth5, A Kapur6.
Abstract
In August 2011, the World Health Organization and the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease launched the Collaborative Framework for Care and Control of Tuberculosis (TB) and diabetes mellitus (DM) to guide policy makers and implementers in combatting the epidemics of both diseases. Progress has been made, and includes identifying how best to undertake bidirectional screening for both diseases, how to provide optimal treatment and care for patients with dual disease and the most suitable framework for monitoring and evaluation. Key programmatic challenges include the following: whether screening should be directed at all patients or targeted at those with high-risk characteristics; the most suitable technologies for diagnosing TB and diabetes in routine settings; the best time to screen TB patients for DM; how to provide an integrated, coordinated approach to case management; and finally, how to persuade non-communicable disease programmes to adopt a cohort analysis approach, preferably using electronic medical records, for monitoring and evaluation. The link between DM and TB and the implementation of the collaborative framework for care and control have the potential to stimulate and strengthen the scale-up of non-communicable disease care and prevention programmes, which may help in reducing not only the global burden of DM but also the global burden of TB.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26162352 PMCID: PMC4497633 DOI: 10.5588/ijtld.15.0069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Tuberc Lung Dis ISSN: 1027-3719 Impact factor: 2.373
Top 10 countries with the highest incidence of TB associated with DM (adapted from Lönnroth et al.7)
Collaborative activities to reduce the dual burden of DM and TB (adapted from the Collaborative Framework for Care and Control of Tuberculosis and Diabetes10)
Programmatic issues related to the screening of TB patients for DM
Programmatic issues related to the treatment and care of patients with both TB and DM
Figure 1.Page of a Tuberculosis-Diabetes Register showing how TB patients were screened for DM and the results recorded at TB Units, in India (adapted from 12). TB = tuberculosis; DM = diabetes mellitus; Y = yes; N = no; RBG = random blood glucose; FBG = fasting blood glucose.
Figure 2.Recording of results of DM screening in A) the back of the TB treatment card and B) the right hand page of the patient TB register in India after the country had adopted a policy of screening all TB patients for DM. HIV= human immunodeficiency virus; DM= diabetes mellitus; DMC = designated microscopy centre; CPT = cotrimoxazole preventive therapy; ART = antiretroviral therapy; H = isoniazid; R = rifampicin; E = ethambutol; MO = Medical Officer; FBS = fasting blood sugar.
Figure 3.Treatment card used for screening persons with DM for active TB every time they attend DM clinics in India (adapted from34). *Fasting, random, post-prandial. †Alive in care, died, lost to follow-up, transferred out. ‡Diet, oral medication, insulin. §TB screen= ask about cough >2 weeks and/or suspicion of TB; positive TB screen= cough >2 weeks and/or suspicion of TB. TB= tuberculosis; DM = diabetes mellitus; Y = yes; N = no.