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A decentralized model of care for drug-resistant tuberculosis in a high HIV prevalence setting. Cheryl McDermid, Helen Cox, Simiso Sokhela, Gilles van Cutsem , Busisiwe Beko, Andiswa Vazi, Johnny Daniels, Virginia Azevedo, Eric Goemaere. Background. Global M/XDR-TB response plan 2007-8
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A decentralized model of care for drug-resistant tuberculosis in a high HIV prevalence setting Cheryl McDermid, Helen Cox, Simiso Sokhela, Gilles van Cutsem, Busisiwe Beko, Andiswa Vazi, Johnny Daniels, Virginia Azevedo, Eric Goemaere
Background Global M/XDR-TB response plan 2007-8 1.6 million MDR-TB patients treated by 2015 In 2008: • 390,000 – 510,000 incident MDR-TB cases worldwide • Only 29,243 MDR-TB cases reported=7% of estimated • <3% of cases receive appropriate treatment WHO, 2010
DR-TB treatment outcomes • Treatment success 62% among 4,959 MDR-TB patients in a systematic review • Only 39 (0.8%) were HIV-infected (Johnston et al, PLoS One, 2009) No data on DR-TB outcomes for HIV positive patients
Key challenges • Scaling up treatment • Improving diagnosis&case-detection • Models of care (hospital, community) • Cost of treatment • Optimal treatment regimens • HIV and DR-TB integrated care • Length and difficulty of current treatment
Khayelitsha Population circa 500,000 Antenatal HIV prevalence 30% > 15,000 on ART ~6,000 TB cases registered each year (case notification > 1,200/100,000/y) Estimated 400 rifampicin-resistant TB cases per year 10 health facilities providing TB diagnosis and treatment (including DR-TB)
Review of DR-TB in Khayelitsha - 2007 Many areas identified needing support: • Long wait for treatment (bed capacity at TB hospital unable to meet demand) • High defaulter rate (>30%) • Limited knowledge and understanding of DR-TB by HCW at primary care level • No DR-TB register at the clinics (no reliable data on DR-TB numbers, defaulter rates and outcomes) • Inconsistent DR-TB screening, monitoring and contact tracing • Infection control non-existent
MDR-TB outcomes, Cape Town TB hospital 2007 38% HIV infected PGWC, unpublished 2010
Aims Improve case detection of DR-TB Improve treatment outcomes Decrease DR-TB transmission Develop a model of care applicable to other settings
Khayelitsha drug resistant TB pilot programme Operational Research Monitoring And Evaluation Patient-centred care and treatment in the community Advocacy • Training • Staff • NGOs • Comm. • workers Infection Control Health Facilities Homes Community • Patient • Support • Counselling • Support • groups • Defaulter • tracing Contacts Identification and Screening Lizo Nobanda Sub-acute Inpatient facility Optimal Treatment Regimen • Monthly • New • Patient • Review • Paediatric • Clinic • DR TB • Task • Team • Meeting Community Awareness Programs Audiology Service
Existing TB programme DR-TB pilot – additional inputs TB programme staff Staff training - ongoing support DR-TB counsellors and social assistance Standard recording DR-TB recording (evaluation) Drug supply and management TB infection control Laboratory support Local inpatient service HIV/TB integrated services Specialised outreach services – pediatrics, audiology screening Treatment supporters
Improving case detection Est. only 54% estimated case detection
Increasing numbers starting DR-TB treatment 83% were started on treatment at their local clinic
Reduced delay to treatment initiation However, 10% of diagnosed cases still die before treatment initiation
HIV co-infection HIV infection rate among DS-TB cases in Khayelitsha is ~70%
Improved survival Survival analysis for patients diagnosed with DR-TB in 2008 Comparison with early data from Tugela Ferry 1-year mortality = 71%
Untreated DR-TB survival The survivors…
Reduced infectiousness with treatment Culture conversion among 160 culture positive cases starting treatment 60% of culture +ves have converted at 2 months
Challenges • Improving case detection – need a rapid test for all TB suspects • Reducing mortality prior to treatment initiation • Improving support for patients during treatment – reducing default • Overcoming stigma and fear among health care staff and in the community • Determining the minimum inputs required in order to scale up treatment provision elsewhere
Conclusion • Decentralizing DR TB treatment to PHC led to: • Increase in case detection and started on treatment • Reduced delay to treatment initiation • 76% survival at one year on treatment increased % HIV/DR-TB co-infected detected • Reduced transmission of DR TB as most infection occurs before diagnosis and treatment
Acknowledgments • City of Cape Town Health Department • Western Cape Province • National Health Laboratory Service • Staff in Khayelitsha clinics • People suffering from drug resistant TB in Khayelitsha