Boyce Ross M, Muiru Anthony, Reyes Raquel, Ntaro Moses, Mulogo Edgar, Matte Michael, Siedner Mark J
Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit Street, Boston, 02114, USA.
Center for Global Health, Massachusetts General Hospital, 100 Cambridge Street #1540, Boston, 02114, USA.
Malar J. 2015 May 15;14:203. doi: 10.1186/s12936-015-0725-0.
The World Health Organization recommends that all suspected malaria cases receive a parasitological diagnosis prior to treatment with artemisinin-based combination therapy. A recent meta-analysis of clinical trials evaluating RDTs for the management of patients with fever found substantial reductions in anti-malarial prescriptions when health workers adhered to treatment protocols based on test results. However few studies have reported on the impact of RDTs on health systems outside research settings.
The study comprised a retrospective interrupted time series analysis, comparing rates of malaria diagnosis, treatment, and resource utilization before and after introduction of RDTs at a peripheral health facility in rural Western Uganda. The use of malaria diagnostic tests was graphically depicted throughout the study period and fit regression models to identify correlates of three outcomes of interest: (1) length of stay (2) the proportion of patients referred to a higher-level health facility, and (3) administration of antibiotics.
Over the course of the study period, 14,357 individuals underwent diagnostic testing for malaria with either a RDT (9,807) or microscopy (4,550). The proportion of patients with parasite-based diagnoses more than tripled to 34% after the introduction of RDTs. RDTs largely replaced microscopy as the diagnostic method of choice. Compared to patients admitted during the pre-RDT period, patients admitted to the health centre with malaria in the post-RDT period had significantly reduced odds of being referred to another health centre (AOR=0.49, P=0.038), receiving antibiotics (AOR=0.42, P<0.001), and a significantly shorter mean length of stay (β=-0.32 days, 95%CI -0.52 to -0.13).
This study is one of the few to demonstrate significant improvement in clinical outcomes and process measures following the introduction of RDTs for the diagnosis of malaria at a rural health facility in Uganda. The results show a reduction in referrals and shorter mean inpatient LOS even as antibiotics were prescribed less frequently. This change greatly increased laboratory throughput and the resultant proportion of patients receiving a parasite-based diagnosis.
世界卫生组织建议,所有疑似疟疾病例在接受以青蒿素为基础的联合疗法治疗前应接受寄生虫学诊断。最近一项对评估快速诊断检测(RDT)用于发热患者管理的临床试验的荟萃分析发现,当卫生工作者遵循基于检测结果的治疗方案时,抗疟药物处方量大幅减少。然而,很少有研究报告RDT对研究环境以外的卫生系统的影响。
该研究包括一项回顾性中断时间序列分析,比较了在乌干达西部农村的一家基层医疗机构引入RDT前后疟疾诊断、治疗和资源利用的比率。在整个研究期间,以图表形式描述了疟疾诊断检测的使用情况,并拟合回归模型以确定三个感兴趣结果的相关因素:(1)住院时间;(2)转诊至上级医疗机构的患者比例;(3)抗生素的使用。
在研究期间,14357人接受了疟疾诊断检测,其中使用RDT检测的有9807人,使用显微镜检测的有4550人。引入RDT后,基于寄生虫诊断的患者比例增加了两倍多,达到34%。RDT在很大程度上取代了显微镜检查成为首选诊断方法。与RDT引入前入院的患者相比,RDT引入后因疟疾入住该卫生中心的患者被转诊至另一家卫生中心的几率显著降低(调整后比值比[AOR]=0.49,P=0.038),接受抗生素治疗的几率显著降低(AOR=0.42,P<0.001),平均住院时间显著缩短(β=-0.32天,95%置信区间[-0.52,-0.13])。
本研究是少数几项证明在乌干达一家农村卫生机构引入RDT进行疟疾诊断后临床结局和流程指标有显著改善的研究之一。结果显示,即使抗生素处方频率降低,转诊人数减少,平均住院时间缩短。这一变化极大地提高了实验室检测量以及接受基于寄生虫诊断的患者比例。