Improving control of tuberculosis in hard-to-reach groups
Submitting Institution
University College LondonUnit of Assessment
Public Health, Health Services and Primary CareSummary Impact Type
HealthResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Public Health and Health Services
Summary of the impact
Research by led Dr Andrew Hayward and Dr Alistair Story (UCL Research
Department of Infection
and Population Health) on tuberculosis in hard-to-reach groups
(particularly homeless people,
problem drug users and prisoners) has led to the introduction of mobile
X-ray screening for
tuberculosis in London, screening 8-10,000 homeless people and drug users
annually. A pan-London
street outreach team has been developed to support hard-to-reach patients
with
tuberculosis, and social care workers are now a core part of
multidisciplinary TB teams. A static
digital teleradiology TB screening network has been established in key
prisons and, most recently,
the research has influenced NICE Public Health Programme Guidelines.
Underpinning research
Research underpinning these impacts began in 2003 with the TB Link
Project which aimed to
improve patient outcomes by addressing social needs. Interventions mainly
involved supporting
access to housing (36%), income/benefits (34%) and immigration entitlement
issues (7%). Over
80% of cases successfully completed treatment. The research was carried
out by Dr Andrew
Hayward in collaboration with Alistair Story (Health Protection Agency
(HPA) at that time, now
UCL/UCLH) [1].
In 2003/4 the London TB Patient Profile worked with all TB nurses
in 35 clinics across London to
look at social as well as clinical factors affecting patient outcomes. The
study included 1,941
patients (over 95% of London TB patients) and showed the importance of
three risk factors in
particular: homelessness, drug use and imprisonment. It demonstrated that
these groups had
extremely high prevalence of tuberculosis (higher than recent migrants
from high incidence
countries) and that these factors were strong independent predictors of
drug resistance, poor
adherence and loss to follow up [2]. Subsequent work based on this
data showed that Crack
Cocaine Users were substantially more likely than others to have smear
positive (infectious) forms
of tuberculosis than other cases, posing a great transmission risk [3].
The work also demonstrated
substantial missed opportunities for diagnosis and early treatment of HIV
(only 50.8% of TB
patients aged > or =20 years without previous testing were offered HIV
testing) [4].
The first work to evaluate mobile X-ray screening started in
collaboration with colleagues in
Holland who were working on a similar project. In 2004 Story and Hayward
led a three-day
screening pilot across several of the larger homeless hostels in
London, and in a prison. One
case of TB was found in a prison, and one among the homeless. This
proof-of-concept study
demonstrated the potential of such a scheme, and prompted the Department
of Health to fund a
demonstration project entitled Evaluation of Targeted Mobile X Ray
Screening for tuberculosis
in high risk groups. Over 21 months the project undertook 23,881
chest X-rays and led to 43
patients starting treatment. Screening shortened delay to diagnosis
three-fold. Modelling
suggested this would prevent around 87 active cases and 389 infections per
year by 2013 and that
the intervention was cost-saving [5]. Nevertheless it highlighted
that because patients were being
lost between initial screening and diagnosis at a clinic, investment was
also needed to support
people through confirmation of diagnosis and treatment. The report also
noted that high turnover of
inmates in prisons prevented high screening coverage with a mobile unit.
A subsequent evaluation of an expanded Find & Treat service
(Abubaker, then HPA now UCL and
Aldridge, UCL) showed the cost effectiveness of the service in identifying
hard to reach patients
and supporting their care [6].
References to the research
[2] Story A, Murad S, Roberts W, Verheyen M, Hayward AC; London
Tuberculosis Nurses
Network. Tuberculosis in London: the importance of homelessness, problem
drug use and
prison. Thorax. 2007 Aug;62(8):667-71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/thx.2006.065409
[4] Rodger AJ, Story A, Fox Z, Hayward A; London Tuberculosis Nurses
Network. HIV
prevalence and testing practices among tuberculosis cases in London: a
missed opportunity
for HIV diagnosis? Thorax. 2010 Jan;65(1):63-9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/thx.2009.122754
[5] Mobile targeted digital chest radiography in the control of
tuberculosis among hard to reach
groups — report to Department of Health 2007 (copy available on request)
[6] Jit M, Stagg HR, Aldridge RW, White PJ, Abubakar I; Find and Treat
Evaluation Team.
Dedicated outreach service for hard to reach patients with tuberculosis in
London:
observational study and economic evaluation. BMJ. 2011 Sep 14;343:d5376.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.d5376
Details of the impact
London is now the `TB capital' of Europe and has more cases annually than
the Netherlands,
Belgium, Greece and Norway combined. TB is curable in virtually all cases
and can be effectively
controlled provided cases are found early and patients can complete
treatment. The research
described above has resulted in new services to improve control of
tuberculosis in hard-to-reach
groups.
The Find&Treat Project
The original TB profile study provided justification for London Region to
invest in a large
demonstration project of mobile X-ray screening in homeless people, drug
users and prisoners.
Our initial evaluation of the demonstration project led the Department of
Health (DH) to invest in
continued funding of mobile X-ray screening in homeless shelters and drug
services and the
expansion of the service to include workers to support patients through
diagnosis and treatment.
This has now become the Find&Treat service — a specialist outreach
team that works alongside
over 200 NHS and third sector front-line services to tackle TB among
homeless people, drug or
alcohol users, vulnerable migrants and people who have been in prison. The
multidisciplinary
Find&Treat team takes TB control into the community, finds cases of
active TB early and supports
patients to take a full course of treatment and get cured. The service
spans the TB pathway from
detection, to diagnosis and onward care. To `Find' TB cases early the team
raises awareness
among service users and frontline professionals and screen almost 10,000
high risk people every
year using a mobile digital X-ray unit (MXU) as recommended by the
National Institute of Health
and Clinical Excellence (NICE). The screening service covers every London
Borough and supports
Public Health England (PHE) to manage outbreaks of TB nationally. Our
subsequent evaluation of
the expanded service contributed to decisions for NHS to take over the
funding of the service
which is now hosted by UCLH on behalf of London [a].
Analysis of service data shows that between January 2008 and June 2013,
Find&Treat undertook
45,385 X-rays leading to 385 referrals, 84 of which resulted in treatment
being commenced for
pulmonary tuberculosis (detection rate 247 per 100,000 individuals
screened). 84% successfully
completed treatment within 12 months (higher than the proportion of cases
who complete TB
treatment nationally). Since 2008 Find&Treat have worked with 1,379
suspected and active TB
cases including 780 cases with active TB (696 referred from TB and allied
services in London and
Birmingham and 84 found on the MXU). Of the culture confirmed cases 33%
were drug resistant
including 59 multidrug-resistant (MDR) and 4 extensively drug-resistant
(XDR) cases. 371 of the
referrals to Find&Treat were because of loss to follow up and deemed
un-contactable by local
services. The outreach team recontacted 74% (275) of whom 73% have
completed treatment (154)
or are well established and expected to complete treatment (46). The team
also support Directly
Observed Therapy (where a responsible adult watches every dose of
treatment being swallowed to
improve adherence) and have pioneered the use of Video Observed Therapy
(VOT) using laptops
and smartphones. VOT is now being evaluated as part of a randomised trial
funded within the
UCL-led TB Reach NIHR Programme grant [b].
Public Health England is now developing a project to expand the service
nationally, creating a
National Infection & Inequality System (NIIS) to provide integrated
testing, treatment, health and
social care for vulnerable populations disproportionately affected by
serious public health
infections, in particular TB, Hepatitis C and HIV. This service will be
directly modelled on the
successful model of Find&Treat [c].
Introduction of static screening in prisons
Our research demonstrated that turnover of prisoners was too high for a
mobile unit to provide
sufficient coverage to pick up cases and recommended the installation of
static digital X-ray units
(DXR) in key prisons. In March 2008, the Chief Medical Officer announced
the intention of DH to
fund the installation of static DXR machines in five London prisons at a
cost of £10m. This decision
was explicitly linked by the CMO to our MXU evaluation project (ref 5
above) [d]. The X-ray units
were all installed and in operation by March 2012. PHE's Director of
Health and Justice reports that
"I have no doubt that the MXU project has had a direct and positive
influence on policy and
programmes relating to active case finding for pulmonary TB among people
in prisons and other
places of detention." A new national partnership agreement just
signed between PHE, NHS
England and the National Offender Management Service (NOMS) has made
further commitments
to ensuring the service is fully utilised, and furthermore, following a
successful trial of the
Find&Treat service at a large Immigration Removal Centre (IRC) near
London, proposals are now
being made to extend the service permanently for use in this setting [e].
Broader influence on control of tuberculosis in hard to reach groups
In July 2009 NICE received the following referral from DH: "Produce
programme guidance on the
effectiveness and cost effectiveness of interventions based on active
case finding among hard-to-reach
groups (find and treat model) for reducing transmission of tuberculosis
and related mortality
and implications for service development." The guideline development
group was chaired by
Hayward and considered a wide range of evidence including the research
described above and
expert testimony from the Find&Treat service. This resulted in the
publication of NICE Public
Health Guidance (37) on Identifying and managing tuberculosis among
hard-to-reach groups [f].
Key recommendations based on our findings included: mobile radiographic
screening to expand to
other higher incidence areas outside London; screening for TB in prisons;
screening for latent TB
in drug users; NHS to provide funds for housing of homeless TB patients
with no other recourse to
support; multidisciplinary teams to include social care workers to support
care; directly observed
therapy to become routine for homeless people, prisoners and drug users;
cohort review (a service
quality improvement model based on international experience and the London
TB profile) to
become routine across TB services nationally.
Simultaneously the Royal College of Nursing, British Thoracic Society,
Health Protection Agency,
National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse produced detailed practical
guidance for
tuberculosis case management and cohort review. In addition to the above
this guidance includes
a risk assessment tool modelled on our original TB patient profile form.
This helps to systematically
identify patients in need of enhanced case management [g].
The approach of adding the support of allied health professionals to work
alongside TB services
which we pioneered in the TB Link project, is now in use in at least 18 TB
services across London
alone. A support workers' forum coordinated by Find&Treat has recently
been established, and the
roles of those who attend vary considerably [h].
Sources to corroborate the impact
[a] Outline of Find&Treat service on the UCLH website:
http://www.uclh.nhs.uk/ourservices/servicea-z/htd/pages/mxu.aspx
BMJ video describing the service: http://www.bmj.com/multimedia/video/2011/07/24/find-and-treat
[b] Letter giving service data from Clinical Lead and Manager for
Find&Treat. Copy available on
request.
[c] National Infections and Inequalities Service submission. See in
particular p. 2 "The plan is to
model NIIS on the successful template of Find&Treat" and p. 5
for involvement of the UCL
team in planning the new service. Copy available on request.
[d] http://www.hpa.org.uk/webc/HPAwebFile/HPAweb_C/1207035533566
See p.3.
[e] Prison screening — letter of support from Director of Health and
Social Justice, Public Health
England. Copy available on request.
[f] PH37: Identifying and managing tuberculosis among hard-to-reach
groups. National Institute
of Health and Clinical Excellence http://publications.nice.org.uk/identifying-and-managing-tuberculosis-among-hard-to-reach-groups-ph37
[g] Royal College of nursing, British Thoracic Society, Health Protection
Agency, National
Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse. Tuberculosis Case Management and
Cohort
Review. Guidance for Health Professionals. 2012
http://www.rcn.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0010/439129/004204.pdf
[h] Report on the forum provided by its co-ordinator. Copy available on
request, and the co-ordinator
can be contacted for corroboration. Contact details provided.