| Literature DB >> 27418550 |
Heidi Albert1, Ruvandhi R Nathavitharana2, Chris Isaacs3, Madhukar Pai4, Claudia M Denkinger5, Catharina C Boehme3.
Abstract
The global roll-out of Xpert MTB/RIF (Cepheid Inc., Sunnyvale, CA, USA) has changed the diagnostic landscape of tuberculosis (TB). More than 16 million tests have been performed in 122 countries since 2011, and detection of multidrug-resistant TB has increased three- to eight-fold compared to conventional testing. The roll-out has galvanised stakeholders, from donors to civil society, and paved the way for universal drug susceptibility testing. It has attracted new product developers to TB, resulting in a robust molecular diagnostics pipeline. However, the roll-out has also highlighted gaps that have constrained scale-up and limited impact on patient outcomes. The roll-out has been hampered by high costs for under-funded programmes, unavailability of a complete solution package (notably comprehensive training, quality assurance, implementation plans, inadequate service and maintenance support) and lack of impact assessment. Insufficient focus has been afforded to effective linkage to care of diagnosed patients, and clinical impact has been blunted by weak health systems. In many countries the private sector plays a dominant role in TB control, yet this sector has limited access to subsidised pricing. In light of these lessons, we advocate for a comprehensive diagnostics implementation approach, including increased engagement of in-country stakeholders for product launch and roll-out, broader systems strengthening in preparation for new technologies, as well as quality impact data from programmatic settings.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27418550 PMCID: PMC4967565 DOI: 10.1183/13993003.00543-2016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir J ISSN: 0903-1936 Impact factor: 16.671
FIGURE 1Timeline of availability of required elements for Xpert MTB/RIF implementation. HBDCs: high-burden developing countries; WHO: World Health Organization; TB: tuberculosis.
FIGURE 2Procurement of Xpert MTB/RIF modules and cartridges under concessionary pricing by quarter (Q) in 2010–2015 (Cepheid data).
FIGURE 3Uptake of Xpert MTB/RIF in 22 high-burden countries, comparison of Xpert cartridge procurement with smear volumes. Data from [8].
Lessons learnt to inform roll-outs of new technologies
| A complete package of solutions including policy/regulatory, training, quality assurance, supply chain management and connectivity needs to be available at product launch |
| Health system strengthening should be up-scaled in alignment with any expansion of diagnostic capacity, with a focus on improving linkages to care and routine impact measurement |
| Planning and budgeting for diagnostics implementation, whether donor or government funded, should include a comprehensive implementation approach including systems strengthening |
| Advocacy and information sharing among test operators, clinicians and the patient community is needed to raise awareness of and demand for testing |
| Expanded engagement and concessionary pricing for private sector providers is needed to expand the impact |
| Diagnostics connectivity is a pre-requisite for future technologies; successful implementation of connectivity solutions will require processes of change at many levels, global commitment, a roadmap and pro-active champions |
| Strong coordination, both globally among donors and partners, and within countries, between National Tuberculosis Programmes, National AIDS Control Programmes and other stakeholders, is essential for efficient rollout |
| Reliance on donor funding to support scale-up of new diagnostics should be reduced by advocating for inclusion of costs in national government budgets |