Cargando…

Potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: Feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) have the potential to identify infectious diseases quickly, minimize disease transmission, and could complement and improve surveillance and control of infectious and vector-borne diseases during outbreaks. The U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency’s Joint Science and Te...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Morrison, Amy C., Schwarz, Julia, Mckenney, Jennie L., Cordova, Jhonny, Rios, Jennifer E., Quiroz, W. Lorena, Vizcarra, S. Alfonso, Sopheab, Heng, Bauer, Karin M., Chhea, Chhorvann, Saphonn, Vonthanak, Hontz, Robert D., Gorbach, Pamina M., Paz-Soldan, Valerie A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8101991/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33901172
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009307
_version_ 1783689039452307456
author Morrison, Amy C.
Schwarz, Julia
Mckenney, Jennie L.
Cordova, Jhonny
Rios, Jennifer E.
Quiroz, W. Lorena
Vizcarra, S. Alfonso
Sopheab, Heng
Bauer, Karin M.
Chhea, Chhorvann
Saphonn, Vonthanak
Hontz, Robert D.
Gorbach, Pamina M.
Paz-Soldan, Valerie A.
author_facet Morrison, Amy C.
Schwarz, Julia
Mckenney, Jennie L.
Cordova, Jhonny
Rios, Jennifer E.
Quiroz, W. Lorena
Vizcarra, S. Alfonso
Sopheab, Heng
Bauer, Karin M.
Chhea, Chhorvann
Saphonn, Vonthanak
Hontz, Robert D.
Gorbach, Pamina M.
Paz-Soldan, Valerie A.
author_sort Morrison, Amy C.
collection PubMed
description Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) have the potential to identify infectious diseases quickly, minimize disease transmission, and could complement and improve surveillance and control of infectious and vector-borne diseases during outbreaks. The U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency’s Joint Science and Technology Office (DTRA-JSTO) program set out to develop novel point-of-need RDTs for infectious diseases and deploy them for home use with no training. The aim of this formative study was to address two questions: 1) could community members in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia competently use RDTs of different levels of complexity at home with visually based instructions provided, and 2) if an RDT were provided at no cost, would it be used at home if family members displayed febrile symptoms? Test kits with written and video (Peru only) instructions were provided to community members (Peru [n = 202]; Cambodia [n = 50]) or community health workers (Cambodia [n = 45]), and trained observers evaluated the competency level for each of the several steps required to successfully operate one of two multiplex RDTs on themselves or other consenting participant (i.e., family member). In Iquitos, >80% of residents were able to perform 11/12 steps and 7/15 steps for the two- and five-pathogen test, respectively. Competency in Phnom Penh never reached 80% for any of the 12 or 15 steps for either test; the percentage of participants able to perform a step ranged from 26–76% and 23–72%, for the two- and five-pathogen tests, respectively. Commercially available NS1 dengue rapid tests were distributed, at no cost, to households with confirmed exposure to dengue or Zika virus; of 14 febrile cases reported, six used the provided RDT. Our findings support the need for further implementation research on the appropriate level of instructions or training needed for diverse devices in different settings, as well as how to best integrate RDTs into existing local public health and disease surveillance programs at a large scale.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8101991
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-81019912021-05-17 Potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: Feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia Morrison, Amy C. Schwarz, Julia Mckenney, Jennie L. Cordova, Jhonny Rios, Jennifer E. Quiroz, W. Lorena Vizcarra, S. Alfonso Sopheab, Heng Bauer, Karin M. Chhea, Chhorvann Saphonn, Vonthanak Hontz, Robert D. Gorbach, Pamina M. Paz-Soldan, Valerie A. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) have the potential to identify infectious diseases quickly, minimize disease transmission, and could complement and improve surveillance and control of infectious and vector-borne diseases during outbreaks. The U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency’s Joint Science and Technology Office (DTRA-JSTO) program set out to develop novel point-of-need RDTs for infectious diseases and deploy them for home use with no training. The aim of this formative study was to address two questions: 1) could community members in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia competently use RDTs of different levels of complexity at home with visually based instructions provided, and 2) if an RDT were provided at no cost, would it be used at home if family members displayed febrile symptoms? Test kits with written and video (Peru only) instructions were provided to community members (Peru [n = 202]; Cambodia [n = 50]) or community health workers (Cambodia [n = 45]), and trained observers evaluated the competency level for each of the several steps required to successfully operate one of two multiplex RDTs on themselves or other consenting participant (i.e., family member). In Iquitos, >80% of residents were able to perform 11/12 steps and 7/15 steps for the two- and five-pathogen test, respectively. Competency in Phnom Penh never reached 80% for any of the 12 or 15 steps for either test; the percentage of participants able to perform a step ranged from 26–76% and 23–72%, for the two- and five-pathogen tests, respectively. Commercially available NS1 dengue rapid tests were distributed, at no cost, to households with confirmed exposure to dengue or Zika virus; of 14 febrile cases reported, six used the provided RDT. Our findings support the need for further implementation research on the appropriate level of instructions or training needed for diverse devices in different settings, as well as how to best integrate RDTs into existing local public health and disease surveillance programs at a large scale. Public Library of Science 2021-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8101991/ /pubmed/33901172 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009307 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Morrison, Amy C.
Schwarz, Julia
Mckenney, Jennie L.
Cordova, Jhonny
Rios, Jennifer E.
Quiroz, W. Lorena
Vizcarra, S. Alfonso
Sopheab, Heng
Bauer, Karin M.
Chhea, Chhorvann
Saphonn, Vonthanak
Hontz, Robert D.
Gorbach, Pamina M.
Paz-Soldan, Valerie A.
Potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: Feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia
title Potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: Feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia
title_full Potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: Feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia
title_fullStr Potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: Feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia
title_full_unstemmed Potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: Feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia
title_short Potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: Feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in Iquitos, Peru and Phnom Penh, Cambodia
title_sort potential for community based surveillance of febrile diseases: feasibility of self-administered rapid diagnostic tests in iquitos, peru and phnom penh, cambodia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8101991/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33901172
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009307
work_keys_str_mv AT morrisonamyc potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT schwarzjulia potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT mckenneyjenniel potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT cordovajhonny potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT riosjennifere potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT quirozwlorena potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT vizcarrasalfonso potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT sopheabheng potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT bauerkarinm potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT chheachhorvann potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT saphonnvonthanak potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT hontzrobertd potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT gorbachpaminam potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia
AT pazsoldanvaleriea potentialforcommunitybasedsurveillanceoffebrilediseasesfeasibilityofselfadministeredrapiddiagnostictestsiniquitosperuandphnompenhcambodia