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Detecting tuberculosis: rapid tools but slow progress | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal
Journal Article
|Research

Detecting tuberculosis: rapid tools but slow progress

England K, Masini T, Fajardo E
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Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) currently recommends Xpert® MTB/RIF as the initial test for all people with presumptive tuberculosis (TB). A number of challenges have been reported, however, in using this technology, particularly in low-resource settings. Here we examine these challenges, and provide our perspective of the barriers to Xpert scale-up as assessed through a survey in 16 TB burden countries in which the Médecins Sans Frontières is present. We observed that the key barriers to scale-up include a lack of policy adoption and implementation of WHO recommendations for the use of Xpert, resulting from high costs, poor sensitisation of clinical staff and a high turnover of trained laboratory
staff; insufficient service and maintenance provision provided by the manufacturer; and inadequate resources for sustainability and expansion. Funding is a critical issue as countries begin to transition out of support from the Global Fund. While it is clear that there is still an urgent need for research into and development of a rapid, affordable point-of-care test for TB that is truly adapted for use in low-resource settings, countries in the meantime need to develop functional and sustainable Xpert networks in order to close the existing diagnostic gap.

Countries

Armenia Belarus Brazil Georgia Kenya Kyrgyzstan Malawi Mozambique Russian Federation South Africa Tajikistan Ukraine Viet Nam Zimbabwe India

Subject Area

tuberculosis

Languages

English
Published Date
21 Sep 2019
Journal
Public Health Action