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Major Reduction in Anti-Malarial Drug Consumption in Senegal after Nation-Wide Introduction of Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests

BACKGROUND: While WHO recently recommended universal parasitological confirmation of suspected malaria prior to treatment, debate has continued as to whether wide-scale use of rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) can achieve this goal. Adherence of health service personnel to RDT results has been poor in s...

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Autores principales: Thiam, Sylla, Thior, Moussa, Faye, Babacar, Ndiop, Médoune, Diouf, Mamadou Lamine, Diouf, Mame Birame, Diallo, Ibrahima, Fall, Fatou Ba, Ndiaye, Jean Louis, Albertini, Audrey, Lee, Evan, Jorgensen, Pernille, Gaye, Oumar, Bell, David
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3071817/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21494674
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018419
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author Thiam, Sylla
Thior, Moussa
Faye, Babacar
Ndiop, Médoune
Diouf, Mamadou Lamine
Diouf, Mame Birame
Diallo, Ibrahima
Fall, Fatou Ba
Ndiaye, Jean Louis
Albertini, Audrey
Lee, Evan
Jorgensen, Pernille
Gaye, Oumar
Bell, David
author_facet Thiam, Sylla
Thior, Moussa
Faye, Babacar
Ndiop, Médoune
Diouf, Mamadou Lamine
Diouf, Mame Birame
Diallo, Ibrahima
Fall, Fatou Ba
Ndiaye, Jean Louis
Albertini, Audrey
Lee, Evan
Jorgensen, Pernille
Gaye, Oumar
Bell, David
author_sort Thiam, Sylla
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: While WHO recently recommended universal parasitological confirmation of suspected malaria prior to treatment, debate has continued as to whether wide-scale use of rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) can achieve this goal. Adherence of health service personnel to RDT results has been poor in some settings, with little impact on anti-malarial drug consumption. The Senegal national malaria control programme introduced universal parasite-based diagnosis using malaria RDTs from late 2007 in all public health facilities. This paper assesses the impact of this programme on anti-malarial drug consumption and disease reporting. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Nationally-collated programme data from 2007 to 2009 including malaria diagnostic outcomes, prescription of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) and consumption of RDTs in public health facilities, were reviewed and compared. Against a marked seasonal variation in all-cause out-patient visits, non-malarial fever and confirmed malaria, parasite-based diagnosis increased nationally from 3.9% of reported malaria-like febrile illness to 86.0% over a 3 year period. The prescription of ACT dropped throughout this period from 72.9% of malaria-like febrile illness to 31.5%, reaching close equivalence to confirmed malaria (29.9% of 584873 suspect fever cases). An estimated 516576 courses of inappropriate ACT prescription were averted. CONCLUSIONS: The data indicate high adherence of anti-malarial prescribing practice to RDT results after an initial run-in period. The large reduction in ACT consumption enabled by the move from symptom-based to parasite-based diagnosis demonstrates that effective roll-out and use of malaria RDTs is achievable on a national scale through well planned and structured implementation. While more detailed information on management of parasite-negative cases is required at point of care level to assess overall cost-benefits to the health sector, considerable cost-savings were achieved in ACT procurement. Programmes need to be allowed flexibility in management of these funds to address increases in other programmatic costs that may accrue from improved diagnosis of febrile disease.
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spelling pubmed-30718172011-04-14 Major Reduction in Anti-Malarial Drug Consumption in Senegal after Nation-Wide Introduction of Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests Thiam, Sylla Thior, Moussa Faye, Babacar Ndiop, Médoune Diouf, Mamadou Lamine Diouf, Mame Birame Diallo, Ibrahima Fall, Fatou Ba Ndiaye, Jean Louis Albertini, Audrey Lee, Evan Jorgensen, Pernille Gaye, Oumar Bell, David PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: While WHO recently recommended universal parasitological confirmation of suspected malaria prior to treatment, debate has continued as to whether wide-scale use of rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) can achieve this goal. Adherence of health service personnel to RDT results has been poor in some settings, with little impact on anti-malarial drug consumption. The Senegal national malaria control programme introduced universal parasite-based diagnosis using malaria RDTs from late 2007 in all public health facilities. This paper assesses the impact of this programme on anti-malarial drug consumption and disease reporting. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Nationally-collated programme data from 2007 to 2009 including malaria diagnostic outcomes, prescription of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) and consumption of RDTs in public health facilities, were reviewed and compared. Against a marked seasonal variation in all-cause out-patient visits, non-malarial fever and confirmed malaria, parasite-based diagnosis increased nationally from 3.9% of reported malaria-like febrile illness to 86.0% over a 3 year period. The prescription of ACT dropped throughout this period from 72.9% of malaria-like febrile illness to 31.5%, reaching close equivalence to confirmed malaria (29.9% of 584873 suspect fever cases). An estimated 516576 courses of inappropriate ACT prescription were averted. CONCLUSIONS: The data indicate high adherence of anti-malarial prescribing practice to RDT results after an initial run-in period. The large reduction in ACT consumption enabled by the move from symptom-based to parasite-based diagnosis demonstrates that effective roll-out and use of malaria RDTs is achievable on a national scale through well planned and structured implementation. While more detailed information on management of parasite-negative cases is required at point of care level to assess overall cost-benefits to the health sector, considerable cost-savings were achieved in ACT procurement. Programmes need to be allowed flexibility in management of these funds to address increases in other programmatic costs that may accrue from improved diagnosis of febrile disease. Public Library of Science 2011-04-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3071817/ /pubmed/21494674 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018419 Text en Thiam et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thiam, Sylla
Thior, Moussa
Faye, Babacar
Ndiop, Médoune
Diouf, Mamadou Lamine
Diouf, Mame Birame
Diallo, Ibrahima
Fall, Fatou Ba
Ndiaye, Jean Louis
Albertini, Audrey
Lee, Evan
Jorgensen, Pernille
Gaye, Oumar
Bell, David
Major Reduction in Anti-Malarial Drug Consumption in Senegal after Nation-Wide Introduction of Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests
title Major Reduction in Anti-Malarial Drug Consumption in Senegal after Nation-Wide Introduction of Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests
title_full Major Reduction in Anti-Malarial Drug Consumption in Senegal after Nation-Wide Introduction of Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests
title_fullStr Major Reduction in Anti-Malarial Drug Consumption in Senegal after Nation-Wide Introduction of Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests
title_full_unstemmed Major Reduction in Anti-Malarial Drug Consumption in Senegal after Nation-Wide Introduction of Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests
title_short Major Reduction in Anti-Malarial Drug Consumption in Senegal after Nation-Wide Introduction of Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests
title_sort major reduction in anti-malarial drug consumption in senegal after nation-wide introduction of malaria rapid diagnostic tests
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3071817/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21494674
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018419
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