Cargando…

Understanding Market Size and Reporting Gaps for Paediatric TB in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan: Supporting Improved Treatment of Childhood TB in the Advent of New Medicines

OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY: We sought to understand gaps in reporting childhood TB cases among public and private sector health facilities (dubbed “non-NTP” facilities) outside the network of national TB control programmes, and the resulting impact of under-reporting on estimates of paediatric disease b...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Coghlan, Renia, Gardiner, Elizabeth, Amanullah, Farhana, Ihekweazu, Chikwe, Triasih, Rina, Grzemska, Malgorzata, Sismanidis, Charalambos
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4604087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26460607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138323
_version_ 1782395000812732416
author Coghlan, Renia
Gardiner, Elizabeth
Amanullah, Farhana
Ihekweazu, Chikwe
Triasih, Rina
Grzemska, Malgorzata
Sismanidis, Charalambos
author_facet Coghlan, Renia
Gardiner, Elizabeth
Amanullah, Farhana
Ihekweazu, Chikwe
Triasih, Rina
Grzemska, Malgorzata
Sismanidis, Charalambos
author_sort Coghlan, Renia
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY: We sought to understand gaps in reporting childhood TB cases among public and private sector health facilities (dubbed “non-NTP” facilities) outside the network of national TB control programmes, and the resulting impact of under-reporting on estimates of paediatric disease burden and market demand for new medicines. METHODOLOGY: Exploratory assessments were carried out in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan, reaching a range of facility types in two selected areas of each country. Record reviews and interviews of healthcare providers were carried out to assess numbers of unreported paediatric TB cases, diagnostic pathways followed and treatment regimens prescribed. MAIN FINDINGS: A total of 985 unreported diagnosed paediatric TB cases were identified over a three month period in 2013 in Indonesia from 64 facilities, 463 in Pakistan from 35 facilities and 24 in Nigeria from 20 facilities. These represent an absolute additional annualised yield to 2013 notifications reported to WHO of 15% for Indonesia, 2% for Nigeria and 7% for Pakistan. Only 12% of all facilities provided age and sex-disaggregated data. Findings highlight the challenges of confirming childhood TB. Diagnosis patterns in Nigeria highlight a very low suspicion for childhood TB. Providers note the need for paediatric medicines aligned to WHO recommendations. CONCLUSION: HOW MARKET DATA CAN SUPPORT BETTER PUBLIC HEALTH INTERVENTIONS: This study emphasises the impact of incomplete reporting on the estimation of disease burden and potential market size of paediatric TB medicines. Further studies on “hubs” (facilities treating large numbers of childhood TB cases) will improve our understanding of the epidemic, support introduction efforts for new treatments and better measure markets for new paediatric medicines.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4604087
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-46040872015-10-20 Understanding Market Size and Reporting Gaps for Paediatric TB in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan: Supporting Improved Treatment of Childhood TB in the Advent of New Medicines Coghlan, Renia Gardiner, Elizabeth Amanullah, Farhana Ihekweazu, Chikwe Triasih, Rina Grzemska, Malgorzata Sismanidis, Charalambos PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY: We sought to understand gaps in reporting childhood TB cases among public and private sector health facilities (dubbed “non-NTP” facilities) outside the network of national TB control programmes, and the resulting impact of under-reporting on estimates of paediatric disease burden and market demand for new medicines. METHODOLOGY: Exploratory assessments were carried out in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan, reaching a range of facility types in two selected areas of each country. Record reviews and interviews of healthcare providers were carried out to assess numbers of unreported paediatric TB cases, diagnostic pathways followed and treatment regimens prescribed. MAIN FINDINGS: A total of 985 unreported diagnosed paediatric TB cases were identified over a three month period in 2013 in Indonesia from 64 facilities, 463 in Pakistan from 35 facilities and 24 in Nigeria from 20 facilities. These represent an absolute additional annualised yield to 2013 notifications reported to WHO of 15% for Indonesia, 2% for Nigeria and 7% for Pakistan. Only 12% of all facilities provided age and sex-disaggregated data. Findings highlight the challenges of confirming childhood TB. Diagnosis patterns in Nigeria highlight a very low suspicion for childhood TB. Providers note the need for paediatric medicines aligned to WHO recommendations. CONCLUSION: HOW MARKET DATA CAN SUPPORT BETTER PUBLIC HEALTH INTERVENTIONS: This study emphasises the impact of incomplete reporting on the estimation of disease burden and potential market size of paediatric TB medicines. Further studies on “hubs” (facilities treating large numbers of childhood TB cases) will improve our understanding of the epidemic, support introduction efforts for new treatments and better measure markets for new paediatric medicines. Public Library of Science 2015-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4604087/ /pubmed/26460607 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138323 Text en © 2015 Coghlan 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
Coghlan, Renia
Gardiner, Elizabeth
Amanullah, Farhana
Ihekweazu, Chikwe
Triasih, Rina
Grzemska, Malgorzata
Sismanidis, Charalambos
Understanding Market Size and Reporting Gaps for Paediatric TB in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan: Supporting Improved Treatment of Childhood TB in the Advent of New Medicines
title Understanding Market Size and Reporting Gaps for Paediatric TB in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan: Supporting Improved Treatment of Childhood TB in the Advent of New Medicines
title_full Understanding Market Size and Reporting Gaps for Paediatric TB in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan: Supporting Improved Treatment of Childhood TB in the Advent of New Medicines
title_fullStr Understanding Market Size and Reporting Gaps for Paediatric TB in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan: Supporting Improved Treatment of Childhood TB in the Advent of New Medicines
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Market Size and Reporting Gaps for Paediatric TB in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan: Supporting Improved Treatment of Childhood TB in the Advent of New Medicines
title_short Understanding Market Size and Reporting Gaps for Paediatric TB in Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan: Supporting Improved Treatment of Childhood TB in the Advent of New Medicines
title_sort understanding market size and reporting gaps for paediatric tb in indonesia, nigeria and pakistan: supporting improved treatment of childhood tb in the advent of new medicines
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4604087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26460607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138323
work_keys_str_mv AT coghlanrenia understandingmarketsizeandreportinggapsforpaediatrictbinindonesianigeriaandpakistansupportingimprovedtreatmentofchildhoodtbintheadventofnewmedicines
AT gardinerelizabeth understandingmarketsizeandreportinggapsforpaediatrictbinindonesianigeriaandpakistansupportingimprovedtreatmentofchildhoodtbintheadventofnewmedicines
AT amanullahfarhana understandingmarketsizeandreportinggapsforpaediatrictbinindonesianigeriaandpakistansupportingimprovedtreatmentofchildhoodtbintheadventofnewmedicines
AT ihekweazuchikwe understandingmarketsizeandreportinggapsforpaediatrictbinindonesianigeriaandpakistansupportingimprovedtreatmentofchildhoodtbintheadventofnewmedicines
AT triasihrina understandingmarketsizeandreportinggapsforpaediatrictbinindonesianigeriaandpakistansupportingimprovedtreatmentofchildhoodtbintheadventofnewmedicines
AT grzemskamalgorzata understandingmarketsizeandreportinggapsforpaediatrictbinindonesianigeriaandpakistansupportingimprovedtreatmentofchildhoodtbintheadventofnewmedicines
AT sismanidischaralambos understandingmarketsizeandreportinggapsforpaediatrictbinindonesianigeriaandpakistansupportingimprovedtreatmentofchildhoodtbintheadventofnewmedicines