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. 2023 Jul 19;18(7):e0288643.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0288643. eCollection 2023.

Strategies to increase childhood tuberculosis case detection at the primary health care level: Lessons from an active case finding study in Zambia

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Strategies to increase childhood tuberculosis case detection at the primary health care level: Lessons from an active case finding study in Zambia

Mary Kagujje et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Introduction: In high TB burden settings, it is estimated that 10-20% of total notifications should be children, however, currently only 6-8% of the total TB notifications in Zambia are children. We assessed whether the implementation of a multicomponent strategy, at primary healthcare facilities, that systematically targets barriers at each step of the childhood TB diagnostic cascade can increase childhood TB case detection.

Methods: We conducted a controlled, interrupted time series analysis to compare childhood TB case notifications before (January 2018-December 2019), and during implementation (January 2020-September 2021) in two intervention and two control Level 1 hospitals in Lusaka, Zambia. At each of the intervention facilities, we implemented a multicomponent strategy constituting: (1) capacity development on childhood TB and interpretation of chest x-ray, (2) TB awareness-raising and demand creation activities, (3) setting up fast track TB services, (4) strengthening of household contact tracing, and (5) improving access to digital chest X-ray for TB screening and Xpert MTB/Rif Ultra for TB diagnosis, through strengthening sample collection in children.

Findings: Among 5,150 children < 15 years screened at the two intervention facilities during the study period, 503 (9.8% yield) were diagnosed with TB. Of these, 433 (86.1%) were identified through facility-based activities (10.5% yield) and 70 (13.9%) were identified through household contact tracing (6.9% yield). Overall, 446 children (88.7%) children with TB were clinically diagnosed. Following implementation of the multicomponent strategy, the proportion children contributed to total TB notifications immediately changed by +1.5% (95%CI: -3.5, 6.6) and -4.4% (95%CI: -7.5, 1.4) at the intervention and control sites, respectively (difference 6.0% [95%CI: -0.7, 12.7]), p = 0.08); the proportion of childhood notifications increased 0.9% (95%CI: -0.7, 2.5%) each quarter at the intervention sites relative to pre-implementation trends, while declining 1.2% (-95%CI: -1.8, -0.6) at the control sites (difference 2.1% [95%CI: 0.1, 4.2] per quarter between, p = 0.046); this translated into 352 additional and 85 fewer childhood TB notifications at the intervention and control sites, respectively, compared to the pre-implementation period.

Conclusion: A standardized package of strategies to improve childhood TB detection at primary healthcare facilities was feasible to implement and was associated with a sustained improvement in childhood TB notifications.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Geographical locations of intervention and control sites under the study.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Study flow diagram.
Fig 3
Fig 3. The proportion of childhood TB notifications among all TB notifications at intervention and controls sites, before and during implementation of a multicomponent strategy to improve childhood TB detection.

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