| Literature DB >> 32316993 |
Tania F Reza1,2, Talemwa Nalugwa3, Katherine Farr4, Mariam Nantale3, Denis Oyuku3, Annet Nakaweesa3, Johnson Musinguzi3, Moksha Vangala1,2, Priya B Shete1,2,3, Austin Tucker5, Olivia Ferguson5, Katherine Fielding6, Hojoon Sohn5, David Dowdy3,5, David A J Moore7, J Lucian Davis3,8,9, Sara L Ackerman10, Margaret A Handley11, Achilles Katamba3,12, Adithya Cattamanchi13,14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delays in diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis (TB) remain common in high-burden countries. To improve case detection, substantial investments have been made to scale-up Xpert MTB/RIF (Xpert), a cartridge-based nucleic acid amplification test that can detect TB within 2 hours, as a replacement for sputum smear microscopy. However, the optimal strategy for implementation of Xpert testing remains unclear.Entities:
Keywords: Cluster randomized trial; Effectiveness-implementation design; Pragmatic trial; Tuberculosis; Xpert MTB/RIF
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32316993 PMCID: PMC7171793 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-020-00988-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Theory-informed barrier assessment and design of intervention strategy
Fig. 2Site selection and enrollment for XPEL TB trial
Mixed methods evaluation strategy, sample, goal, data collection timing, and analysis
| Strategy | Sample | Goal | Data collection | Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Process metrics | All patients referred for TB diagnostic evaluation at intervention sites | Examine variability in adoption of and fidelity to intervention components across sites | Entire post-randomization period | Multivariate regression models |
| Surveys | 1) Health workers involved in TB evaluation at all sites* 2) Sixty patients per site (20 patients/site, 400 total pre-randomization; 40 patients/site, 800 total post-randomization)** | Examine whether the XPEL TB strategy modifies targeted barriers to TB diagnostic evaluation | Once before and once after trial is completed | Multivariate regression models |
| Focus groups | Health workers involved in TB evaluation at intervention sites* | Assess acceptability of each component of the intervention strategy. | After trial is completed | Thematic interpretation |
| In-depth interviews | Purposive: 20–30 health workers at high- and low-performing intervention strategy sites (2–3/site) | Understand reasons for variability in adoption and implementation of the XPEL TB strategy | After trial is completed | Thematic interpretation |
*Based on prior experience, we anticipate 5–10 staff members will be involved in TB diagnostic services at each health center (50–100 each at intervention and control health centers)
**Patients will be selected randomly within strata based on gender and timing of health center visit (undergoing TB testing vs. completed testing/initiating TB treatment)
Trial outcomes categorized using the RE-AIM framework
| RE-AIM domains | Trial outcomes |
|---|---|
| Reach | • Number/proportion completing Xpert testing |
| Effectiveness | Process outcomes • Number/proportion diagnosed with and treated for TB within 14 days • Number/proportion diagnosed with microbiologically-confirmed TB • Time to diagnosis of microbiologically-confirmed TB • Number/proportion diagnosed with rifampin resistance • Number/proportion with microbiologically-confirmed TB completing treatment Health and health economic outcomes • Number/proportion who died within 6 months • Number/proportion with microbiologically-confirmed TB who died within 6 months • Number/proportion treated for TB who died within 6 months • Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio |
| Adoption | • Proportion of eligible sites able and willing to initiate each component of the intervention strategy |
| Implementation | Fidelity • Process metrics for each intervention strategy component • Proportion tested by Xpert • Number of GeneXpert device non-operation days • Proportion of invalid, error, or indeterminate Xpert results • Proportion treated on same-day if Xpert-positive • Proportion of performance feedback report cards reviewed at staff meetings • Qualitative data from health worker focus group discussions and in-depth interviews Acceptability • Thematic output from health worker focus group discussions Patient and health system costs • Incremental cost of introducing and maintaining the intervention strategy • Incremental patient cost per diagnostic evaluation and per treatment initiated Modification of targeted barriers • Median scores for health worker knowledge, attitudes, subjective norms, and self-efficacy related to TB diagnostic evaluation guidelines • Thematic output from provider in-depth interviews • Median patient costs associated with completing TB diagnostic evaluation • Median scores for domains of patient satisfaction questionnaire |
XPEL-TB PRECIS-2 domains
| PRECIS-2 domain | Assessment of XPEL-TB | Rating (1–5, where 5 is very pragmatic) |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility | Nearly all adults who would have been offered Xpert testing if available in routine care are included in the trial. Only patients with a previous history of TB are excluded (to not falsely increase the primary outcome). | 5 |
| Recruitment | No formal recruitment procedures are used. A waiver of consent was obtained to enable automatic inclusion of data on all adults undergoing TB evaluation at trial sites. No incentives given to patients in either arm. | 5 |
| Setting | The trial is implemented at 20 sites at the lowest level of the health system where TB diagnostic services (sputum smear microscopy) are provided—the sites targeted for expansion of Xpert testing using next-generation platforms. | 5 |
| Organization | Xpert testing is implemented using existing healthcare staff and infrastructure at trial sites. | 5 |
| Flexibility: delivery | Process re-design and performance feedback were adapted by each trial site to suit its needs and processes of care and supervision. | 5 |
| Flexibility: adherence | No additional incentives or procedures are in place to encourage patients in the intervention arm with microbiologically-confirmed TB to initiate on treatment. | 5 |
| Follow-up | Process and outcome data are collected from routine clinic records. No onsite research staff to conduct patient enrollment, data collection, or follow-up, with the exception of vital status assessment. | 5 |
| Primary outcome | The primary outcome is relevant to TB patients, their relatives, clinic staff, and the Uganda NTLP | 5 |
| Primary analysis | No special allowances will be made in the primary analysis for non-adherence or variability in implementation by site | 5 |