| Literature DB >> 28683750 |
Toby Leslie1,2, Mark Rowland3, Amy Mikhail3,4, Bonnie Cundill3, Barbara Willey3, Asif Alokozai4, Ismail Mayan4, Anwar Hasanzai5, Sayed Habibullah Baktash6, Nader Mohammed4, Molly Wood4, Habib-U-Rahman Rahimi4, Baptiste Laurent3, Cyril Buhler4,7, Christopher J M Whitty3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends parasitological diagnosis of malaria before treatment, but use of malaria rapid diagnostic tests (mRDTs) by community health workers (CHWs) has not been fully tested within health services in south and central Asia. mRDTs could allow CHWs to diagnose malaria accurately, improving treatment of febrile illness.Entities:
Keywords: Afghanistan; Cluster randomised trial; Community health worker; Malaria; Rapid diagnostic test
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28683750 PMCID: PMC5501368 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0891-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Intervention description
| Training/intervention | description | Control arm (no RDTs) | Intervention arm (RDTs) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic CHW training | 6-week basic training in preventative and curative services for infectious diseases, nutrition and mother-and-child health. Malaria and malaria treatment guidelines are included in the curriculum. Includes record keeping for health service reporting (Health Management Information System, HMIS) | √ | √ |
| Malaria training | 1-day refresher workshop on control, treatment and surveillance for malaria, including the guidelines for community-based treatment of suspected malaria | √ | √ |
| mRDT training | Half-day training on use of mRDTs, including symptoms, practical and demonstrated use of mRDTs and treatment guidelines for RDT-confirmed | X | √ |
| mRDTs | Bivalent immunofluorescent antigen detection tests for diagnosis of | X | √ |
| ACTs | Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine with artesunate according to standard dosing table for adults and children in co-blister packs. For treatment of RDT-confirmed | X | √ |
| SP and CQ | For treatment of suspected malaria (SP and/or CQ) and treatment of pan-specific positive and | √ | √ |
| Co-trimoxazole | For treatment of pneumonia in children; included in the standard package of drugs provided to CHWs | √ | √ |
Enrolment characteristics of clinics, CHWs and patients by trial arm
| Intervention | Control | |
|---|---|---|
| Clinic-level characteristics: | ||
| Number of clinics | 11 | 11 |
| Number of clinics per province | ||
| Kunduz | 5 | 5 |
| Nangahar | 6 | 6 |
| Number of health posts (median number per clinic, interquartile range (IQR)) | 111 (6, 5–17) | 109 (10, 6–13) |
| Number of patients enrolled (median number per clinic, IQR) | 1199 (114, 50–140) | 1201 (103, 63–129) |
| Health post and CHW-level characteristics: | ||
| Number of CHWs (median number of CHWs per health clinic, IQR) | 120 (8, 6–17) | 137 (12, 10–14) |
| Included in analysis | 108 | 114 |
| CHW gender ( | 75 (62.5) | 83 (60.6) |
| Education level of CHWs, | ||
| None | 41 (34.8) | 34 (25.0) |
| Informal education | 5 (4.2) | 5 (3.7) |
| Primary | 20 (17.0) | 20 (14.7) |
| Secondary | 44 (37.3) | 42 (30.9) |
| Post-secondary/higher | 8 (6.8) | 35 (25.7) |
| Socioeconomic status of CHWs ( | ||
| Below median | 59 (51.3) | 63 (48.1) |
| Above median | 56 (48.7) | 68 (51.9) |
| Data missing | 5 | 5 |
| Median number of consultations in week prior to the study (IQR) | 11 (7–20) | 14 (9–19) |
| Median number of hours in last week performing CHW activities (IQR) | 2.5 (1.3–5.7) | 5.4 (1.8–9.0) |
| Patient characteristics: | ||
| Number of patients (median per CHW, IQR) | 1199 (11.9, 6.7–14) | 1201 (7.3, 5.4–16.8) |
| Number of patients evaluated: | 1099 | 1055 |
| Reasons for exclusion: | ||
| Missing treatment or diagnosis data | 81 | 128 |
| Reference diagnosis missing | 19 | 19 |
| Prevalence of malaria in the sample ( | ||
|
| 159 (13.2) | 194 (16.2) |
|
| 45 (3.7) | 45 (3.7) |
| Mixed infection | 2 (0.2) | 1 (0.1) |
| Gender of patient ( | 647 (54.6) | 674 (56.2) |
| Age band of patient ( | ||
| 0–1 year | 9 (0.8) | 5 (0.4) |
| 1–5 years | 82 (6.9) | 62 (4.2) |
| 6–10 years | 269 (22.8) | 171 (14.3) |
| 10–18 years | 302 (25.6) | 311 (26.0) |
| > 18 years | 520 (44.0) | 649 (54.2) |
|
| 975 (81.5) | 822 (68.6) |
|
| ||
| Morning (6 am–12 pm) | 425 (35.5) | 477 (39.8) |
| Afternoon (12 pm–6 pm) | 338 (28.2) | 319 (26.6) |
| Evening (6 pm–10 pm) | 354 (29.5) | 354 (29.5) |
| Night (11 pm–6 am) | 82 (6.8) | 50 (4.2) |
|
| ||
| Health post | 959 (81.4) | 803 (68.5) |
| Patient’s home | 207 (17.6) | 362 (30.4) |
| Other | 12 (1.0) | 25 (2.1) |
| Reported symptoms ( | ||
| Fever | 1119 (93.5) | 1172 (97.6) |
| Headache | 1113 (92.8) | 1119 (93.2) |
| Vomiting | 311 (26.0) | 488 (40.7) |
| Diarrhoea | 169 (14.1) | 252 (21.0) |
| Cough | 569 (47.5) | 416 (34.6) |
| Other symptom(s) | 210 (17.5) | 131 (10.9) |
| Patients with fast breathing ( | 57 (4.8) | 26 (2.2) |
Fig. 1Trial profile
Primary and secondary outcomes by trial arm
| Patient level: | Intervention | Control | Risk ratio (95% CI) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary outcome | ||||
| Appropriate treatment of malaria by CHWsa | 828 (75.3) | 185 (17.5) | 3.72 (2.40–5.77) | <0.001 |
| Secondary outcomes | ||||
| Malaria negative patients prescribed antimalarial drug ( | 95 (10.0) | 813 (87.6) | 0.11 (0.08–0.15) | <0.001 |
| P. falciparum malaria cases prescribed an ACT ( | 12 (28.6) | –b | – | |
| P. vivax malaria cases prescribed CQ ( | 70 (45.1) | 164 (85.9) | 0.43 (0.31–0.59) | <0.001 |
| Malaria negative patients prescribed co-trimoxazole ( | 613 (67.2) | 295 (35.0) | 1.98 (1.18–3.33) | 0.012 |
| Referral practices: | ||||
| Referral on to formal health services ( | 414 (34.6) | 317 (26.4) | 1.53 (0.89–2.63) | 0.116 |
aComposite measure defined against the malaria PCR result for each patient: falciparum or mixed-species malaria treated with SP/AS; vivax malaria treated with CQ (regardless of accompaniment with SP); and PCR-confirmed negative cases receiving no antimalarial drug
bACTs were not used in the control arm, as they can only be prescribed based on parasitological diagnosis. In the intervention arm, N = 42
Fig. 2Effect of malaria RDTs on accuracy of malaria treatment at health post level
Sensitivity and specificity of mRDTs used in low and high transmission areas judged against PCR
| Sensitivity | Specificity | |
|---|---|---|
| Pan-specifica | ||
| Overall | 122/225 (54.2, 47.5–60.9) | 891/974 (91.5, 89.5–93.2) |
| Low transmission | 1/47 (2.1, 0.1–11.3) | 418/419 (99.8, 98.7–100) |
| High transmission | 121/178 (68.0, 60.6–74.8) | 473/555 (85.2, 82.0–88.1) |
| Pf-specific | ||
| Overall | 25/47 (53.2, 38.1–67.9) | 1097/1133 (96.8, 95.6–97.8) |
| Low transmission | 0/7 | – |
| High transmission | 25/40 (62.5, 45.8–77.3) | 645/681 (94.7, 92.8–96.3) |
aDetects any Plasmodium species including P. vivax and P. falciparum