| Literature DB >> 30811385 |
Ramnath Subbaraman1,2, Ruvandhi R Nathavitharana3, Kenneth H Mayer3,4, Srinath Satyanarayana5, Vineet K Chadha6, Nimalan Arinaminpathy7, Madhukar Pai8.
Abstract
The cascade of care is a model for evaluating patient retention across sequential stages of care required to achieve a successful treatment outcome. This approach was first used to evaluate HIV care and has since been applied to other diseases. The tuberculosis (TB) community has only recently started using care cascade analyses to quantify gaps in quality of care. In this article, we describe methods for estimating gaps (patient losses) and steps (patients retained) in the care cascade for active TB disease. We highlight approaches for overcoming challenges in constructing the TB care cascade, which include difficulties in estimating the population-level burden of disease and the diagnostic gap due to the limited sensitivity of TB diagnostic tests. We also describe potential uses of this model for evaluating the impact of interventions to improve case finding, diagnosis, linkage to care, retention in care, and post-treatment monitoring of TB patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30811385 PMCID: PMC6392267 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Fig 1Examples of TB care cascades, including a generic model.
(A) A generic model for a care cascade for active TB; (B) the care cascade for individuals with any form of active TB in India in 2013, modified from [10] based on updated WHO TB incidence estimates [23]; and (C) the care cascade for patients with any form of active TB in South Africa in 2013 [11]. The Indian care cascade has 1-year recurrence-free survival as the final step, while the South African care cascade stops at treatment success. Individuals with latent TB are not included in these models. Whiskers represent 95% confidence intervals. TB, tuberculosis; WHO, World Health Organization.
Comparison of the Indian and South African TB care cascades for 2013.
| Indian TB care cascade (modified from [ | South African TB care cascade (from [ | |
|---|---|---|
| Low HIV prevalence | High HIV prevalence | |
| Similar proportions of TB patients are treated in the private and public sector | Public sector treats the vast majority of TB patients | |
| Sputum microscopy as the most common frontline test | Xpert MTB/RIF and sputum microscopy as the frontline tests | |
| Number of treated patients from country TB reports; meta-analyses of local studies to estimate key gaps | Number of diagnosed and treated patients from a national electronic TB register; meta-analysis of local studies to estimate PTLFU | |
| Estimated number of prevalent TB cases in 2013 (modified | Estimated number of incident TB cases in 2013 plus half of the estimated number of patients with undetected TB in 2012 | |
| 1-year recurrence-free survival | Treatment success | |
| 43% | 53% | |
| 7% | 22% |
aThese estimates are adjusted from the original publication based on revised TB incidence estimates for India in 2015. Overall TB incidence in India was revised substantially upward by WHO, and estimates of MDR TB incidence in India were not available in prior WHO reports.
bTreatment success is defined as patients who either achieved cure or treatment completion.
cCascade completion here is defined as the outcome of treatment success, rather than recurrence-free survival to allow comparison between the Indian and South African cascades.
Abbreviations: MDR TB, multidrug-resistant TB; PTLFU, pretreatment loss to follow-up; TB, tuberculosis.
Fig 2Examples of MDR TB care cascades.
(A) The care cascade for individuals with MDR TB in India in 2013, modified from [10] based on updated WHO MDR TB incidence estimates [23], and (B) the care cascade for individuals with rifampin-resistant TB in South Africa in 2013 [11]. Rifampin resistance is considered to be a surrogate marker for multidrug resistance. The Indian care cascade has 1-year recurrence-free survival as the final step, while the care cascade for South Africa stops at treatment success. Whiskers represent 95% confidence intervals. MDR, multidrug-resistant TB; TB, tuberculosis; WHO, World Health Organization.
Recommended outcome and process indicators for a care cascade for active TB.
| Cascade stage | Outcome indicators for cascade steps (useful for monitoring program outcomes) | Methods or required data for outcome indicators | Process indicators for cascade gaps | Methods or required data for process indicators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of individuals with prevalent active TB in a population for each form of TB | Population-based TB prevalence survey, including drug-susceptibility testing and prior TB treatment history for diagnosed patients | Distance to nearest TB health facility as a surrogate measure of the proportion of individuals without access to TB services | Questions asked to TB patients diagnosed in population-based prevalence surveys | |
| Annual number of individuals with incident active TB in a population for each form of TB | Modeling methods may facilitate estimation of incidence from active TB prevalence, surveys of the annual risk of TB infection, government case notifications, TB drug sales, or other data | Proportion who have not sought medical care | Questions asked to TB patients diagnosed in population-based prevalence surveys | |
| Time delays in care seeking | In-depth interviews with individuals starting TB treatment at health facilitiesd | |||
| Number of individuals who died of TB without having received TB care | Population-based verbal autopsy surveys, including in-depth interviews with families of individuals who died of probable TB | |||
| Number of individuals with smear-positive TB who accessed TB tests | Extrapolation from the proportion of patients who did not submit a second sputum sample ( | Proportion of individuals with suspected TB who did not undergo any sputum testing | Audit of patient records at TB diagnostic facilities | |
| Number of individuals with Xpert-positive TB who accessed TB tests | Number evaluated equals the number diagnosed | |||
| Number of individuals with smear- or Xpert-negative TB who accessed TB tests or who had initiation of appropriate workup | Estimation based on the sensitivity of sputum microscopy or Xpert MTB/RIF in a given setting ( | Proportion of individuals with suspected TB with negative sputum microscopy or Xpert test results who do not receive a medical diagnosis | Audit of patient records at TB diagnostic facilities | |
| Number of individuals with extrapulmonary TB who had initiation of appropriate workup | Estimation based on the anticipated rate of underdiagnosis of extrapulmonary TB in a given setting ( | |||
| Number of individuals with MDR or RR TB who accessed TB tests | Extrapolation from culture-based studies estimating the proportion of MDR/RR TB among new and previously treated patients in a given setting ( | |||
| Health system–related delays in diagnosisd | In-depth interviews with patients starting TB treatmentd | |||
| Number of individuals with smear- or Xpert-positive (i.e., bacteriologically diagnosed) TB who were successfully diagnosed | Data on bacteriologically diagnosed pulmonary TB patients is usually efficiently captured in patient registers at diagnostic facilities | Proportion of patients lost prior to referral from a TB diagnostic facility to a treatment facility | Audit of diagnostic and referral registers at TB diagnostic facilities | |
| Number of individuals with smear-negative, Xpert-negative, or extrapulmonary TB who were successfully diagnosed | These patients have more prolonged diagnostic workups and may be listed in separate registers from bacteriologically diagnosed pulmonary TB patients, such as registers used to refer patients to treatment sites | Proportion of patients lost after referral from the TB diagnostic facility to a treatment facility | Audit of referral registers at TB diagnostic facilities and registers at treatment facilities | |
| Number of individuals with MDR TB or RR TB who were successfully diagnosed as having drug-resistant TB | These patients can be identified through lab registers recording drug-susceptibility test results. Otherwise, they may be misclassified as drug-susceptible TB patients | Delays in treatment initiationd | In-depth interviews with patients starting TB treatmentd | |
| Number of individuals registered (or notified) in TB treatment | TB treatment records or electronic registers | Proportion of patients who experience treatment failure, die, or are lost to follow-up in the intensive phase of therapy | TB treatment records | |
| Proportion of patients who experience treatment failure, die, or are lost to follow-up in the continuation phase of therapy | TB treatment records | |||
| Proportion of expected doses of TB medication actually taken during the treatment course (measure of the quality of medication adherence) [ | TB treatment records | |||
| Number of patients who complete TB therapy | TB treatment records or electronic registers | Proportion of patients who experience TB recurrence or death within 1 year of treatment completion | Cohort studies involving close follow-up of patients every few months after treatment, with careful workup of new pulmonary symptoms, ideally with mycobacterial culture | |
| Proportion of patients with post-TB lung disease, including obstructive disease, restrictive/fibrotic disease, and pulmonary hypertension | Routine post-treatment follow-up of patients with spirometry and other measures of pulmonary function | |||
| Number of patients who survive for 1 year after completing TB treatment without disease recurrence | Cohort studies involving close follow-up of patients every few months after treatment up to 12 months, with careful workup of any new pulmonary symptoms, ideally with mycobacterial culture | |||
a Gaps can be estimated as the difference between two steps (i.e., Gap 1 = Step 1 − Step 2). The process indicators described in the table will further inform reasons for each gap.
b “Accessed a TB diagnostic test” refers to individuals with TB who either accessed an appropriate bacteriological test for TB or who had initiation of appropriate workup (for extrapulmonary or pulmonary TB patients who might be diagnosed empirically).
c Distance of a patient’s home from the nearest health facility is only one aspect of access to care; other factors include economic and social barriers, though these may be harder to measure routinely.
d Single in-depth interviews with TB patients at the time of treatment initiation can be used to capture information on delays in care seeking, diagnosis, and treatment initiation.
e Steps 3, 4, 5, and 6 are best estimated by following a single patient cohort, starting with diagnosed TB patients identified in Step 3 (i.e., a cohort-based or denominator–denominator linked approach).
Abbreviations: MDR, multidrug-resistant; RR, rifampin-resistant; TB, tuberculosis.
Survey data that can be collected during active TB prevalence surveys, in addition to standard diagnostic tests, to facilitate estimation of care cascade outcome and process indicators.
| Survey questions for individuals diagnosed with active TB in a prevalence survey | Benefit for understanding care cascade outcomes and process indicators |
|---|---|
| History of prior TB treatment | Estimation of the proportion of individuals with active TB who have a prior TB treatment history in the population |
| Nearest government facility with TB services | Estimation of proportion of individuals with active TB who may not have adequate access to TB services |
| Whether the patient has sought care for TB symptoms | Indirect evidence of the proportion of incident cases seeking care and of the delay before doing so |
| If care was sought, whether the patient was screened with a sputum test or chest X-ray | Indirect evidence of the proportion of incident cases with access to TB diagnostic tests and a measure of quality of care |
| Duration of TB symptoms | May help to model annual incidence from point prevalence; indirect evidence of delays in seeking care |
Fig 3An example of how potential interventions can be mapped onto different gaps to address patient losses in the TB care cascade.
Different interventions might be chosen based on the setting. We do not cover the evidence basis for these interventions here. TB Champions refers to individuals who have survived TB who serve as advocates to increase awareness and support for patients with active TB who are in treatment or who have completed treatment [89]. COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; DST, drug susceptibility testing; LPA, line probe assay; SMS, short messaging service; TB, tuberculosis.