| Literature DB >> 28356302 |
Heidi Hopkins1, Katia J Bruxvoort1, Matthew E Cairns1, Clare I R Chandler1, Baptiste Leurent1, Evelyn K Ansah2, Frank Baiden3, Kimberly A Baltzell4, Anders Björkman5, Helen E D Burchett1, Siân E Clarke1, Deborah D DiLiberto1, Kristina Elfving6, Catherine Goodman1, Kristian S Hansen1,7, S Patrick Kachur8, Sham Lal1, David G Lalloo9, Toby Leslie1,10, Pascal Magnussen11, Lindsay Mangham Jefferies1, Andreas Mårtensson12, Ismail Mayan10, Anthony K Mbonye13,14, Mwinyi I Msellem15, Obinna E Onwujekwe16, Seth Owusu-Agyei1,17, Hugh Reyburn1, Mark W Rowland1, Delér Shakely18, Lasse S Vestergaard19, Jayne Webster1, Virginia L Wiseman1,20, Shunmay Yeung1, David Schellenberg1, Sarah G Staedke1, Christopher J M Whitty1.
Abstract
Objectives To examine the impact of use of rapid diagnostic tests for malaria on prescribing of antimicrobials, specifically antibiotics, for acute febrile illness in Africa and Asia.Design Analysisof nine preselected linked and codesigned observational and randomised studies (eight cluster or individually randomised trials and one observational study).Setting Public and private healthcare settings, 2007-13, in Afghanistan, Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda.Participants 522 480 children and adults with acute febrile illness.Interventions Rapid diagnostic tests for malaria.Main outcome measures Proportions of patients for whom an antibiotic was prescribed in trial groups who had undergone rapid diagnostic testing compared with controls and in patients with negative test results compared with patients with positive results. A secondary aim compared classes of antibiotics prescribed in different settings.Results Antibiotics were prescribed to 127 052/238 797 (53%) patients in control groups and 167 714/283 683 (59%) patients in intervention groups. Antibiotics were prescribed to 40% (35 505/89 719) of patients with a positive test result for malaria and to 69% (39 400/57 080) of those with a negative result. All but one study showed a trend toward more antibiotic prescribing in groups who underwent rapid diagnostic tests. Random effects meta-analysis of the trials showed that the overall risk of antibiotic prescription was 21% higher (95% confidence interval 7% to 36%) in intervention settings. In most intervention settings, patients with negative test results received more antibiotic prescriptions than patients with positive results for all the most commonly used classes: penicillins, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (one exception), tetracyclines, and metronidazole.Conclusions Introduction of rapid diagnostic tests for malaria to reduce unnecessary use of antimalarials-a beneficial public health outcome-could drive up untargeted use of antibiotics. That 69% of patients were prescribed antibiotics when test results were negative probably represents overprescription.This included antibiotics from several classes, including those like metronidazole that are seldom appropriate for febrile illness, across varied clinical, health system, and epidemiological settings. It is often assumed that better disease specific diagnostics will reduce antimicrobial overuse, but they might simply shift it from one antimicrobial class to another. Current global implementation of malaria testing might increase untargeted antibiotic use and must be examined. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28356302 PMCID: PMC5370398 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.j1054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Description of study designs and interventions in patients who underwent rapid diagnostic test for malaria (mRDT)
| Study abbreviation | Design | Tests used* | Training† provided with test introduction in intervention settings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Afgh-com | Cluster randomised trial | CareStart Pf/Pan, AccessBio | One day MoH training: performing mRDTs and prescribing antimalarials |
| Afgh-pub | Individually randomised trial | CareStart Pf/Pan, AccessBio | One day MoH training: performing mRDTs and prescribing antimalarials |
| Cam-pub | Cluster randomised trial | SD Bioline Malaria Ag Pf/Pan, Standard Diagnostics | One day training: performing mRDTs, prescribing antimalarials. Enhanced training group: additional two day interactive training on adapting to the malaria guideline change including identifying major alternative causes of febrile illness, and communication skills |
| Ghan-pub | Individually randomised trial | OptiMAL-IT, Diamed AG | Two day training: use of mRDTs, antimalarial prescribing, identifying major alternative causes of febrile illness |
| Tanz1-pub | Baseline and follow-up surveys before and after mRDT introduction | Primarily SD Bioline Pf, Standard Diagnostics | Two day MoH training: performing mRDTs, prescribing antimalarials, rationale for malaria guideline change, identifying major alternative causes of febrile illness |
| Tanz2-pub | Baseline survey followed by cluster randomised trial | Paracheck Pf, Orchid Biomedical Systems | Two day MoH training: performing mRDTs, prescribing antimalarials, rationale for malaria guideline change, identifying major alternative causes of febrile illness. Enhanced training group: three additional half day workshops on adapting to and sustaining guideline change, and communication skills |
| Uga-pub | Cluster randomised trial | Primarily SD Bioline Pf, or SD Bioline Pf/Pan, Standard Diagnostics | Two day training plus on site supervision: performing mRDTs, prescribing antimalarials, identifying major alternative causes of febrile illness, and communication skills |
| Uga-priv | Cluster randomised trial | First Response Ag Pf card, Premier Medical Corporation | Four day training: performing mRDTs, prescribing antimalarials, referral algorithm for mRDT-negative results, and communication skills |
| Nige-mix | Formative study followed by cluster randomised trial | SD Bioline Malaria Ag Pf/Pan, Standard Diagnostics | Half day training: demonstration on mRDT use. Enhanced training group: additional two day training on performing mRDTs, prescribing antimalarials, and communication skills |
MoH=Ministry of Health.
*mRDTs selected in agreement with national health authorities and supplied by studies in most cases, except in Tanz1-pub where they were supplied by MoH as part of national scale-up, and in Uga-pub where they were supplied by MoH with study back-up in case of stockouts of antibiotics because of intermittent supply.
†Many training programmes included information on identifying alternative causes of fever; none included systematic guidance on management of alternative causes of fever.
Malaria diagnostic testing, test results, and antibiotic prescribing in control areas compared with areas where rapid diagnostic tests for malaria (mRDTs) were introduced
| Study | Percentage (No) who underwent diagnostic test | Percentage (No) of those tested whose result was negative | Percentage (No) prescribed at least one antibiotic | Risk ratio for antibiotic prescription in mRDT area | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control* | mRDT | Control* | mRDT | Control* | mRDT | ||||
| Afgh-com/a | 0 (0) | 98.8 (724/733) | 0† | 71.2 (515/723) | 18.2 (110/605) | 54.1 (383/708) | 2.98 (1.62 to 5.5) | ||
| Afgh-com/b | 0 (0) | 100 (466/466) | 0† | 99.8 (462/463) | 48.4 (286/591) | 68.5 (317/463) | 1.41 (0.93 to 2.15) | ||
| Afgh-pub/a | 100‡ (2005/2005) | 100‡ (2048/2048) | 67.9 (1357/2000) | 72.9 (1493/2048) | 38.1 (763/2005) | 40.8 (836/2048) | 1.07 (0.99 to 1.17) | ||
| Afgh-pub/b | 55.5‡ (466/840) | 100‡ (856/856) | 96.6 (450/466) | 99.2 (849/856) | 50.6 (425/840) | 70.6 (604/856) | 1.39 (0.99 to 1.97) | ||
| Cam-pub/a | 78.3 (313/400) | 75.3 (1111/1475) | 75.6 (232/307) | 81.6 (896/1098) | 72.8 (287/394) | 78.5 (1130/1439) | 1.08 (0.93 to 1.26) | ||
| Cam-pub/b | 80.4 (226/281) | 79.5 (1448/1822) | 6.0 (13/218) | 49.4 (697/1412) | 50.4 (140/278) | 52.1 (925/1774) | 1.03 (0.66 to 1.63) | ||
| Ghan-pub | 52.5‡ (1908/3634) | 100‡ (3629/3629) | 69.7 (1320/1907) | 64.0 (2321/3629) | 29.5 (1069/3623) | 32.3 (1168/3615) | 1.10 (0.97 to 1.24) | ||
| Tanz1-pub/a§ | 7.3 (50/689) | 48.4 (363/750) | 50.0 (25/50) | 78.6 (283/360) | 29.7 (204/688) | 44.7 (335/749) | 1.51 (1.12 to 2.03) | ||
| Tanz1-pub/b§ | 12.7 (71/559) | 43.2 (167/387) | 50.7 (36/71) | 89.2 (149/167) | 35.2 (197/559) | 56.4 (219/388) | 1.60 (1.27 to 2.02) | ||
| Tanz1-pub/c§ | 31.3 (156/498) | 71.5 (409/572) | 44.9 (70/156) | 53.1 (217/409) | 33.1 (165/498) | 49.0 (280/572) | 1.48 (1.19 to 1.84) | ||
| Tanz2-pub | 0 (0/16 068) | 39.8¶ (17 559/44 119) | 0† | 74.6 (12 897/17 297) | 61.5 (9875/16 068) | 73.2 (32 274/44 121) | 1.19 (1.13 to 1.25) | ||
| Uga-pub | 7.3 (15 285/210 758) | 52.9 (117 350/210 578) | 41.3 (6261/15 171) | 30.5 (35 711/117 070) | 53.7 (113 101/ 210 758) | 57.9 (128 404/221 755) | 1.08 (0.90 to 1.30) | ||
| Uga-priv | 0 (0/8109) | 97.3 (10 078/10 365) | 0† | 43.0 (4297/9987) | 19.4 (48/248)** | 34.9 (87/249)** | 1.80 (1.30 to 2.50) | ||
| Nige-mix | 1.7 (27/1634) | 23.1 (1137/4922) | 0 (0/25) | 47.7 (537/1126) | 23.3 (382/1642) | 15.2 (752/4946) | 0.65 (0.46 to 0.93) | ||
*Microscopy services were not present or were limited in five study settings. In Cam-pub, microscopy was widely available and its use increased during the time of the trial alongside a national malaria campaign. In Tanz1-pub, microscopy was available in some higher level facilities but was not frequently used. The two individually randomised studies (Afgh-com, Ghan-pub) introduced rapid diagnostic tests in some settings where routine care included microscopy. In other countries, the effect of introducing tests was evaluated against control settings where presumptive clinical diagnosis was the norm.”
†No observations (no testing available or performed in control area).
‡Afgh-pub and Ghan-pub were individually randomised trials; all patients in intervention group were tested with malaria rapid diagnostic test (mRDT); in control group, half were tested by microscopy, and half were diagnosed clinically.
§Tanz1 recorded medicines actually obtained by patients; other studies recorded medicines prescribed.
¶Figure is lower than that reported in primary paper39 because the present analysis included all patients with data, rather than only patients defined by study as mRDT-eligible.
**Only subset of patients (n=497) in Uga-priv followed up after consultation to collect data on medicines prescribed.
Description of study contexts and populations of patients according to whether they underwent rapid diagnostic test for malaria (mRDT)
| Region and study abbreviation | No of patient encounters | Percentage (No) of positive test results in symptomatic patients* | Setting | Healthcare sector | Median (IQR) patient age (years) | Study dates | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | mRDT | ||||||
| East Afghanistan (Afgh-com/a) | 607 | 733 | 28.8 (208/723) | Urban and rural | Community | 14 (8-30) | Oct 2011-May 2012 |
| North Afghanistan (Afgh-com/b) | 594 | 466 | (1/463) | ||||
| East Afghanistan (Afgh-pub/a) | 2005 | 2048 | 27.1 (555/2048) | Urban and rural | Public | 13 (7-25) | Sept 2009-Sept 2010 |
| North Afghanistan (Afgh-pub/b) | 840 | 856 | (7/856) | ||||
| West Cameroon (Cam-pub/a) | 400 | 1477 | 18.4 (202/1098) | Urban and rural | Public/mission | 13 (3-29) | Oct-Dec 2011 |
| Central Cameroon (Cam-pub/b) | 281 | 1824 | 50.6 (715/1412) | ||||
| South east Ghana (Ghan-pub) | 3634 | 3629 | 36.0 (1308/3629) | Rural | Public | 13 (4-32) | Aug 2007-Dec 2008 |
| North Tanzania (Tanz1-pub/a) | 689 | 750 | 21.4 (77/360) | Rural/peri-urban | Public | 2 (1-17) | May-Oct 2010; April-July 2012† |
| West Tanzania (Tanz1-pub/b) | 559 | 388 | 10.8 (18/167) | ||||
| South east Tanzania (Tanz1-pub/c) | 498 | 572 | 46.9 (192/409) | ||||
| North east Tanzania (Tanz2-pub) | 16 068 | 44 121 | 25.4 (4400/17 297) | Rural | Public | 11 (2-31) | Sept 2010-Jan 2011; Feb 2011-March 2012† |
| South east Uganda (Uga-pub) | 210 758 | 221 755 | 69.5 (81 359/117 070) | Rural | Public | 12 (3-28) | April 2011-March 2013 |
| South central Uganda (Uga-priv) | 8109‡ | 10 365‡ | 57.0 (5690/9987) | Rural | Private retail | 8 (2 – 22) | Jan–Dec 2011 |
| South central Nigeria (Nige-mix) | 1642 | 4946 | 52.3 (589/1126) | Urban and rural | Public and private retail | 26 (18 – 35) | July–Dec 2009; June-Dec 2011† |
IQR=interquartile range.
*Proportion of patients testing positive for malaria (among those in intervention settings who were tested) presented as proxy for malaria epidemiology.
†Ranges separated by semicolon indicate pre-/post- evaluations conducted before and after introduction of mRDTs. Other studies consisted of multiple study arms without (control) and with (intervention) mRDTs, evaluated simultaneously.
‡In Uga-priv only a subset of patients (n=497; 248 in control setting, 249 in intervention setting) were followed up after consultation to collect data on medicines prescribed.

Fig 1 Risk ratios for antibiotic prescription in randomised studies comparing patients in control settings with patients in settings where malaria rapid diagnostic test intervention was implemented. Weights are from random effects analysis

Fig 2 Risk ratios for antibiotic prescription in settings with malaria rapid diagnostic test intervention, comparing patients with positive versus negative malaria test results. Afgh-com/b is not included because risk ratio could not be calculated; comparison is not possible when no patients with positive test results received antibiotic
Antibiotic prescribing by test result in areas with rapid diagnostic test for malaria (mRDT) intervention
| Study | Percentage (No) of patients prescribed at least one antibiotic* | Risk ratio for antibiotic prescription for test negative | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative test result | Positive test result | ||
| Afgh-com/a | 72.8 (366/503) | 8.1 (16/197) | 9.0 (6.2 to 12.9) |
| Afgh-com/b | 68.9 (316/459) | 0 (0/1) | —† |
| Afgh-pub/a | 54.7 (816/1493) | 3.6 (20/555) | 15.2 (8.0 to 28.9) |
| Afgh-pub/b | 71.0 (603/849) | 14.3 (1/7) | 5.0 (2.31 to 10.7) |
| Cam-pub/a | 81.6 (718/880) | 72.5 (140/193) | 1.13 (1.00 to 1.26) |
| Cam-pub/b | 58.5 (397/679) | 50.9 (356/700) | 1.15 (0.96 to 1.37) |
| Ghan-pub | 41.3 (953/2310) | 16.5 (215/1305) | 2.50 (2.16 to 2.91) |
| Tanz1-pub/a‡ | 53.0 (150/283) | 31.6 (24/76) | 1.68 (1.00 to 2.83) |
| Tanz1-pub/b‡ | 58.4 (87/149) | 44.4 (8/18) | 1.31 (0.57 to 3.04) |
| Tanz1-pub/c‡ | 61.8 (134/217) | 30.7 (59/192) | 2.01 (1.42 to 2.85) |
| Tanz2-pub | 75.6 (9750/12 897) | 30.1 (1326/4400) | 2.51 (2.04 to 3.09) |
| Uga-pub | 69.9 (24 963/35 711) | 40.8 (33 214/81 359) | 1.71 (1.38 to 2.12) |
| Uga-priv | 46.0 (52/113) | 23.6 (30/127) | 1.95 (1.41 to 2.69) |
| Nige-mix | 17.7 (95/537) | 16.3 (96/589) | 1.09 (0.79 to 1.49) |
*Where denominators do not sum to total, uptake of mRDTs by clinicians was not 100%, so that mRDT not performed for proportion of patients seen.
†Comparison not possible where no mRDT-positive patients received antibiotic.
‡Tanz1 recorded drugs actually obtained by patients; other studies recorded medicines prescribed.
Proportion (number) of all patients seen who were prescribed each class of antibiotics*
| Penicillin | Cephalo-sporin | Macrolide | Tetracycline | TMP/SMX | Quinolone | Chloramphenicol | Amino-glycoside (gentamicin) | Metronidazole | Other | Type unknown | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Afgh-pub† (n=5749) | 26.5 (1523) | 0.1 (6) | 0.5 (30) | 0.9 (50) | 10.4 (598) | 0.2 (10) | 5.0 (289) | 0 (0) | 2.1 (122) | 0.1 (4) | 1.1 (66) |
| Cam-pub (n=3982) | 5.0 (200) | 2.0 (80) | 1.7 (66) | 0.5 (20) | 1.0 (39) | 1.3 (50) | 0.8 (31) | 0.5 (21) | 7.0 (277) | 0.1 (3) | 52.1 (2075) |
| Ghan-pub (n=7263) | 17.6 (1281) | 1.7 (120) | 0.7 (54) | 0.5 (33) | 2.9 (213) | 2.8 (202) | 0.9 (62) | 0.01 (1) | 7.5 (544) | 0.01 (1) | 0 (0) |
| Tanz1-pub‡ (n=3456) | 8.8 (304) | 0.03 (1) | 0.1 (4) | 0 (0) | 17.0 (588) | 0.1 (3) | 0.5 (17) | 0.03 (1) | 1.9 (66) | 0 (0) | 15.9 (548) |
| Tanz2-pub (n=60 189) | 31.5 (18 928) | 0.04 (22) | 4.8 (2863) | 5.4 (3247) | 24.5 (14 766) | 1.4 (843) | 0.8 (499) | 0.01 (6) | 5.1 (3056) | 0 (0) | 0.1 (59) |
| Uga-pub (n=432 513) | 18.7 (80 748) | 0.02 (100) | 0.6 (2586) | 1.5 (6421) | 32.8 (141 904) | 1.6 (6776) | 0.01 (45) | 1.2 (5339) | 6.9 (29 622) | 0.1 (448) | 0 (0) |
| Uga-priv§ (n=497) | 9.3 (46) | 0.2 (1) | 3.6 (18) | 0.4 (2) | 9.3 (46) | 0.8 (4) | 2.2 (11) | 0 (0) | 4.6 (23) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Nige-mix (n=6588) | 2.3 (154) | 0.2 (14) | 0.4 (23) | 0.2 (11) | 2.0 (131) | 0.7 (48) | 0.4 (24) | 0 (0) | 1.7 (109) | 0.02 (10) | 10.7 (708) |
*Penicillins primarily included oral and injectable penicillin formulations, and amoxicillin with or without clavulanic acid, as well as ampicillin, cloxacillin, dicloxacillin, and flucloxacillin; cephalosporins included first and second generation cephalosporins, as well as ceftriaxone and cefixime; macrolides included azithromycin and erythromycin; tetracycline was typically doxycycline; TMP/SMX=trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole; quinolones primarily included ciprofloxacin, as well as levofloxacin, nalidixic acid, norfloxacin, and sparfloxacin; metronidazole also included secnidazole, tinidazole; “other” included clindamycin, nitrofurantoin, thalazole, and others.
†Data presented only for Afghanistan study in public health facilities (Afgh-pub/a and Afgh-pub/b). In study among community health workers in Afghanistan (Afgh-com/a and Afgh-com/b) trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole was only antibiotic available to prescribers.
‡Tanz1 recorded drugs actually obtained by patients; other studies recorded drugs prescribed.
§Only subset of patients (n=497) in Uga-priv were followed up after consultation to collect data on drugs prescribed.

Fig 3 Antibiotic class as proportion of all antibiotics prescribed in each study (control and intervention settings combined). Afghanistan data are from Afgh-pub only; Afgh-com health workers had access only to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. White areas for Cameroon, Nigeria, Afghanistan, and Tanzania-1 indicate that systemic (oral or injectable) antibiotic was prescribed but that name was not specified in study records. Labels indicate classes that accounted for ≥5% of all antibiotics prescribed for each study
Risk ratios (95% confidence interval) for antibacterial prescription by class* for patients with negative v test positive test results in rapid diagnostic test for malaria (mRDT) intervention†
| Penicillin | TMP/SMX | Metronidazole | Tetracycline | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Afgh-pub | 28.2 (11.5 to 69) | 19.7 (7.2 to 54) | 0‡ | 6.5 (0.97 to 43) |
| Cam-pub | 1.70 (1.08 to 2.69) | 0.96 (0.47 to 1.94) | 1.24 (0.78 to 1.97) | 6.3 (0.86 to 46) |
| Ghan-pub | 2.25 (1.72 to 2.95) | 3.57 (2.30 to 5.5) | 2.64 (1.55 to 4.5) | 9.0 (0.94 to 87) |
| Tanz1-pub§ | 3.21 (1.80 to 5.7) | 1.32 (0.88 to 1.98) | 0‡ | 0‡ |
| Tanz2-pub | 3.73 (2.82 to 4.9) | 1.87 (1.45 to 2.40) | 2.45 (1.38 to 4.3) | 3.21 (1.98 to 5.2) |
| Uga-pub | 2.17 (1.68 to 2.80) | 1.48 (1.13 to 1.95) | 3.37 (2.72 to 4.2) | 7.0 (4.7 to 10.5) |
| Uga-priv | 2.00 (0.98 to 4.1) | 1.43 (0.70 to 2.91) | 2.47 (0.76 to 8.0) | 0‡ |
*Penicillins primarily included oral and injectable penicillin formulations, and amoxicillin with or without clavulanic acid, as well as ampicillin, cloxacillin, dicloxacillin, and flucloxacillin; TMP/SMX=trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole; metronidazole also included secnidazole, tinidazole; tetracycline was typically doxycycline.
†Afgh-com, study among community health workers in Afghanistan, dropped from this analysis because trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole was only antibiotic to which participating health workers had access. Nige-mix, study in Nigeria, dropped from this analysis as no or few observations in many relevant categories.
‡No or few observations in relevant categories.
§Tanz1 recorded drugs actually obtained by patients; other studies recorded medicines prescribed.