Vounba Passoret, Loul Severin, Tamadea Ludovic F, Siawaya Joël F D
Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS) Commission/Fourth phase of the Regional Disease Surveillance Systems Enhancement Project (REDISSE IV), Libreville, Gabon.
Department of Laboratory Services, CHU Mère-Enfant Fondation Jeanne EBORI, Libreville, Gabon.
Afr J Lab Med. 2022 Mar 31;11(1):1570. doi: 10.4102/ajlm.v11i1.1570. eCollection 2022.
Laboratory systems have been largely neglected on the margins of health systems in Africa. However, since the 2000s, many African countries have benefited from massive investments to strengthen laboratory capacities through projects fighting priority diseases (HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria). This review examined the laboratory capacities of the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS). Online research using specific terms was carried out. Studies published between 2000 and 2021 on the role of the laboratory in disease and antimicrobial resistance surveillance in the 11 ECCAS countries were considered. The number of human and animal health laboratories meeting international standards was very low in the sub-region. There were only seven International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 15189-accredited human health laboratories, with five in Cameroon and two in Rwanda. There were five high biosafety level (BSL) laboratories (one BSL3 laboratory each in Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Congo, and one BSL4 laboratory in Gabon) and three ISO 17025-accredited laboratories in the ECCAS sub-region. Only six countries currently have whole-genome sequencing devices, which is insufficient for a sub-region as large and populous as ECCAS. Yet, a plethora of pathogens, particularly haemorrhagic viruses, are endemic in these countries. The need for laboratory capacity strengthening following a One Health approach is imperative. Since emerging and re-emerging zoonotic infectious diseases are projected to triple in frequency over the next 50 years and given the inextricable link between human and animal health, actors in the two health sectors must collaborate to preserve world health.
在非洲,实验室系统在卫生系统边缘很大程度上被忽视了。然而,自21世纪以来,许多非洲国家受益于大量投资,通过抗击重点疾病(艾滋病毒/艾滋病、结核病、疟疾)的项目来加强实验室能力。本综述考察了中部非洲国家经济共同体(ECCAS)的实验室能力。开展了使用特定术语的在线研究。考虑了2000年至2021年期间发表的关于实验室在11个ECCAS国家疾病和抗菌药物耐药性监测中作用的研究。该次区域达到国际标准的人类和动物卫生实验室数量非常少。仅有7个获得国际标准化组织(ISO)15189认可的人类卫生实验室,其中喀麦隆有5个,卢旺达有2个。ECCAS次区域有5个高生物安全水平(BSL)实验室(喀麦隆、中非共和国、刚果民主共和国和刚果共和国各有1个BSL3实验室,加蓬有1个BSL4实验室)以及3个获得ISO 17025认可的实验室。目前只有6个国家拥有全基因组测序设备,这对于像ECCAS这样幅员辽阔且人口众多的次区域来说是不够的。然而,这些国家有大量病原体流行,特别是出血热病毒。迫切需要按照“同一健康”方法加强实验室能力。鉴于预计在未来50年里新出现和再次出现的人畜共患传染病频率将增加两倍,并且考虑到人类和动物卫生之间有着千丝万缕的联系,两个卫生部门的行为体必须合作以维护全球健康。