| Literature DB >> 30364389 |
Patrick K Moonan1, Sreenivas A Nair2, Reshu Agarwal3, Vineet K Chadha4, Puneet K Dewan5, Umesh D Gupta6, Christine S Ho3, Timothy H Holtz3, Ajay M Kumar7, Nishant Kumar8, Prahlad Kumar9, Susan A Maloney1, Sundari R Mase10, John E Oeltmann1, C N Paramasivan11, Malik M Parmar12, Kiran K Rade12, Ranjani Ramachandran12, Raghuram Rao8, Virendra S Salhorta8, Rohit Sarin13, Sanjay Sarin11, Kuldeep S Sachdeva8, Sriram Selvaraju14, Rupak Singla15, Diya Surie1, Jamhoih Tonsing16, Srikanth P Tripathy17, Sunil D Khaparde8.
Abstract
The End TB Strategy envisions a world free of tuberculosis-zero deaths, disease and suffering due to tuberculosis by 2035. This requires reducing the global tuberculosis incidence from >1250 cases per million people to <100 cases per million people within the next two decades. Expanding testing and treatment of tuberculosis infection is critical to achieving this goal. In high-burden countries, like India, the implementation of tuberculosis preventive treatment (TPT) remains a low priority. In this analysis article, we explore potential challenges and solutions of implementing TPT in India. The next chapter in tuberculosis elimination in India will require cost-effective and sustainable interventions aimed at tuberculosis infection. This will require constant innovation, locally driven solutions to address the diverse and dynamic tuberculosis epidemiology and persistent programme monitoring and evaluation. As new tools, regimens and approaches emerge, midcourse adjustments to policy and practice must be adopted. The development and implementation of new tools and strategies will call for close collaboration between local, national and international partners-both public and private-national health authorities, non-governmental organisations, research community and the diagnostic and pharmaceutical industry. Leading by example, India can contribute to global knowledge through operational research and programmatic implementation for combating tuberculosis infection.Entities:
Keywords: Chemoprophylaxis; Prevention strategies; Public Health; Tuberculosis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30364389 PMCID: PMC6195150 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Potential burden of latent tuberculosis infection among household members by antituberculosis drug resistance profile, India—2016
| DST result | Proportion with DST profile | Estimated number of TB index cases | Estimated number of household tuberculosis infections |
| n (95% confidence limits)* | n (95% CI)† | n (95% CI)‡§ | |
| Drug susceptible | 72.0 (70.7 to 73.2) | 1 263 569 (1 240 755 to 1 284 629) | 3 032 566 (2 977 812 to 3 083 110) |
| Any resistance to isoniazid | 11.1 (10.3 to 12.4) | 194 800 (180 761 to 217 615) | 467 520 (433 826 to 522 276) |
| Any resistance to rifampicin | 6.2 (5.5 to 6.9) | 108 807 (96 523 to 121 092) | 261 137 (261 137 to 290 621) |
| Any resistance to fluoroquinolone | 5.1 (4.5 to 5.8) | 89 503 (78 973 to 101 788) | 214 807 (189 535 to 244 291) |
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*Source data: Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Government of India. Report of the first nationwide antituberculosis drug resistance survey—India, 2014–2015.70
†Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme Case Reporting Data, 2016. N=1 754 957.30
‡Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner, India. HH-01. Normal Households by Household Size. Mean household size=4.8.31
§Assumes 50% latent tuberculosis infection rate.10 25–29
DST, drug susceptibility testing.
Potential challenges and solutions to tuberculosis preventive treatment implementation, India
| Major challenges | Potential solutions |
| Political will and leadership | Unprecedented attention to the urgent global response to end tuberculosis. United Nations General Assembly meeting will take place in September, 2018* |
| Prime Minister Narendra Modi pledges to eliminate TB by 2025 in India (10 years in advance of global targets)† | |
| Leveraging the international community to negotiate ‘patient-friendly’ pricing for newer drugs, especially for low income families suffering from TB | |
| Ability to rule-out TB disease | Adopting international screening algorithms to the local context (with and without chest radiographs)‡ |
| Availability and use of Xpert MTB/RIF testing (Cepheid, Sunnyvale, California, USA)§ | |
| Availability and use of chest radiography. India has a robust health system; however, access to care is asymmetrical between rural and urban populations. The forthcoming ‘ | |
| Acceptance, adherence and completion of tuberculosis preventive treatment | Availability and use of shorter, |
| Patient-centric motivational counselling, mHealth solutions (eg, SMS reminders), social support and networking | |
| Treatment-positive messaging and training of all partners supporting TPT implementation. Utilisation of ECHO platform for building a community of practice with regards to TPT** | |
| Programmatic reporting of TPT activities, including patient outcomes | |
| Monitoring treatment-related adverse events | Adopting treatment screening algorithms for the selection of treatment; screening for appropriate TPT exclusion criteria |
| Patient and provider education on TPT adverse events | |
| Programmatic reporting of TPT activities, including patient outcomes | |
| Availability and use of the national target spontaneous reporting pharmacovigilance system†† | |
| Procurement and supply chain management | Accurately estimating the burden of latent infection at subnational levels |
| National-level and state-level coordination and forecasting | |
| Utilisation of Global Drug Facility technical assistance and procurement and supply management tools‡‡ | |
| Implementation research | Establishing a reliable, cost-effective test to rapidly detect tuberculosis infection, and identify those most likely to benefit from preventive treatment in the India context |
| Establishing TPT regimens that are most effective in India, with careful consideration of posology and duration for children and adults | |
| Designing of effective, targeted, TPT interventions tailored to local epidemiology and programme performance | |
| Assessing treatment cascades among persons with a high likelihood of progressing to active disease | |
| Understanding transmission dynamics in a population with a high likelihood of repeated exposures |
*United Nations, General Assembly. Draft resolution submitted by the President of the General Assembly. UN 72 Session.103
†Narendra Modi address at the End TB Summit. Delivered on March 13, 2018.104
‡Systematic Screening for Active Tuberculosis: Principles and Recommendations. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2013.105
§Central TB Division. TB India 2017: Revised national tuberculosis control program annual status report. New Delhi: Government of India; 2018.90
¶Government of India. Ayushman Bharat.106
**Struminger B, Arora S, Zalud-Cerrato S, Lowrance D, Ellerbrock T. Building virtual communities of practice for health. Lancet. 2017;390(10095):632–4.107
††Thota P, Thota A, Medhi B, et al. Drug safety alerts of pharmacovigilance programme of India: A scope for targeted spontaneous reporting in India. Perspect Clin Res. 2018 Jan–Mar;9(1):51–5.108
‡‡StopTB Partnership. Procurement and Supply Management (PSM) Tools.109
ECHO, Extension of Community Healthcare Outcomes; SMS, Short Message Service; TPT, Tuberculosis Preventive Treatment.
Guidelines for implementing a national tuberculosis preventive treatment programme in India
| A recent review identified a number of further research needed to improve our understanding of tuberculosis infection from clinical and programmatic perspectives. | |
| 1. | Accurate estimates of the tuberculosis infection burden in India. Rational, targeted testing and treatment of tuberculosis infection shall be guided by local epidemiological trends. This includes local and regional estimates for infection and also rates of antituberculosis drug resistance, diabetes mellitus, HIV coprevalence and undernutrition |
| 2. | Development and programmatic assessment of accurate diagnostic tests for predicting progression from infection to active tuberculosis disease. Tests should be sensitive and specific, convenient to the patient, inexpensive and highly reproducible. Ideally, tests should be able to distinguish between latency and active disease and recognise drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. |
| 3. | Improved selection of candidates for tuberculosis preventive treatment (TPT). We need to improve our understanding of the host-pathogen interaction in India, immunological response and biomarkers to predict which persons benefit most from TPT. We need further studies to understand how M. tuberculosis evades the immune system, which persons it infects, how it lays dormant for years and what mechanisms trigger progression to active disease. These studies will inform the development of vaccines and also which persons to treat. |
| 4. | Development and programmatic assessment of a variety of efficacious treatment options. Short, well-tolerated, therapeutic regimens are needed. Randomised clinical trials conducted in the Indian context to assess efficacy, tolerability and drug-interaction profile are required. In high prevalent areas, the risk of reinfection increases. In such communities, the optimal duration of treatment remains unclear. There is no evidence (through randomised clinical trial) of specific treatment regimens for persons exposed to drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. We need further research to define the composition, posology and duration of preventive regimens for such persons. |
| 5. | Simple, easy-to-use algorithms for determining TPT eligibility, appropriate regimen and length of treatment should be developed based on individual risk, local epidemiology and programmatic performance. |
| 6. | Optimising tuberculosis infection treatment to the Indian context. Context-specific interventions need development to enhance adherence to treatment through the optimisation of local Indian resources |
| 7. | Monitoring and evaluation of programme performance in implementing tuberculosis infection treatment. Surveillance systems for tuberculosis infection and treatment-associated adverse events need to be developed and used to monitor programme implementation and performance. Preventive treatment cascades should be considered to objectively assess progress and make direct quantitative measurements of patient retention at each step of tuberculosis service delivery ( |
| 8. | Cost-effectiveness analysis. Targeted cost-effectiveness studies are required for the rational scale-up of tuberculosis infection treatment among various populations throughout India (eg, diabetics, undernourished and other vulnerable populations). |
Figure 1Potential losses at each stage of the TPT cascade. *Includes ruling out active tuberculosis. The values were based on the estimated number of household contacts exposed to pansensitive M. tuberculosis per year in India (table 1). Percentage lost at each stage was based on the meta-analysis of Alsdurf et al.95 TPT, tuberculosis preventive treatment.