» Articles » PMID: 31878978

Economic Considerations Support C-reactive Protein Testing Alongside Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests to Guide Antimicrobial Therapy for Patients with Febrile Illness in Settings with Low Malaria Endemicity

Overview
Journal Malar J
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Tropical Medicine
Date 2019 Dec 28
PMID 31878978
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Malaria is no longer a common cause of febrile illness in many regions of the tropics. In part, this success is a result of improved access to accurate diagnosis and effective anti-malarial treatment, including in many hard-to-reach rural areas. However, in these settings, management of other causes of febrile illness remains challenging. Health systems are often weak and other than malaria rapid tests no other diagnostics are available. With millions of deaths occurring annually due to treatable bacterial infections and the ever increasing spread of antimicrobial resistance, improvement in the management of febrile illness is a global public health priority. Whilst numerous promising point-of-care diagnostics are in the pipeline, substantial progress can be made in the interim with existing tools: C-reactive protein (CRP) is a highly sensitive and moderately specific biomarker of bacterial infection and has been in clinical use for these purposes for decades, with dozens of low-cost devices commercially available. This paper takes a health-economics approach to consider the possible advantages of CRP point-of-care tests alongside rapid diagnostic tests for malaria, potentially in a single multiplex device, to guide antimicrobial therapy for patients with febrile illness. Three rudimentary assessments of the costs and benefits of this approach all indicate that this is likely to be cost-effective when considering the incremental costs of the CRP tests as compared with either (i) the improved health outcomes for patients with bacterial illnesses; (ii) the costs of antimicrobial resistance averted; or (iii) the economic benefits of better management of remaining malaria cases and shorter malaria elimination campaigns in areas of low transmission. While CRP-guided antibiotic therapy alone cannot resolve all challenges associated with management of febrile illness in remote tropical settings, in the short-term a multiplexed CRP and malaria RDT could be highly cost-effective and utilize the well-established funding and distribution systems already in place for malaria RDTs. These findings should spark further interest amongst industry, academics and policy-makers in the development and deployment of such diagnostics, and discussion on their geographically appropriate use.

Citing Articles

Evaluation of an electronic clinical decision support algorithm to improve primary care management of acute febrile illness in rural Cambodia: protocol for a cluster-randomised trial.

Chew R, Wynberg E, Liverani M, Rekol H, Nguon C, Dysoley L BMJ Open. 2024; 14(10):e089616.

PMID: 39424394 PMC: 11492946. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-089616.


Performance evaluation of a combination Plasmodium dual-antigen CRP rapid diagnostic test in Lambaréné, Gabon.

Alabi A, Musangomunei F, Lotola-Mougeni F, Bie-Ondo J, Murphy K, Essone P Infection. 2024; 53(1):285-295.

PMID: 39177882 PMC: 11825617. DOI: 10.1007/s15010-024-02366-y.


Diagnostic accuracy of DPP Fever Panel II Asia tests for tropical fever diagnosis.

Dhawan S, Dittrich S, Arafah S, Ongarello S, Mace A, Panapruksachat S PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2024; 18(4):e0012077.

PMID: 38598549 PMC: 11034646. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0012077.


Bridging the Gap from Molecular Surveillance to Programmatic Decisions for Malaria Control and Elimination.

Golumbeanu M, Edi C, Hetzel M, Koepfli C, Nsanzabana C Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2023; 112(1_Suppl):35-47.

PMID: 38150733 PMC: 11720679. DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.22-0749.


Using point-of-care diagnostic testing for improved antibiotic prescription: an economic model.

Antonanzas F, Juarez-Castello C, Rodriguez-Ibeas R Health Econ Rev. 2021; 11(1):29.

PMID: 34370115 PMC: 8351365. DOI: 10.1186/s13561-021-00326-y.


References
1.
Maze M, Bassat Q, Feasey N, Mandomando I, Musicha P, Crump J . The epidemiology of febrile illness in sub-Saharan Africa: implications for diagnosis and management. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2018; 24(8):808-814. PMC: 6057815. DOI: 10.1016/j.cmi.2018.02.011. View

2.
Lubell Y, Staedke S, Greenwood B, Kamya M, Molyneux M, Newton P . Likely health outcomes for untreated acute febrile illness in the tropics in decision and economic models; a Delphi survey. PLoS One. 2011; 6(2):e17439. PMC: 3044764. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0017439. View

3.
Do N, Ta N, Tran N, Than H, Vu B, Hoang L . Point-of-care C-reactive protein testing to reduce inappropriate use of antibiotics for non-severe acute respiratory infections in Vietnamese primary health care: a randomised controlled trial. Lancet Glob Health. 2016; 4(9):e633-41. PMC: 4985565. DOI: 10.1016/S2214-109X(16)30142-5. View

4.
Gouws E, Bryce J, Habicht J, Amaral J, Pariyo G, Schellenberg J . Improving antimicrobial use among health workers in first-level facilities: results from the multi-country evaluation of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness strategy. Bull World Health Organ. 2004; 82(7):509-15. PMC: 2622903. View

5.
McLean A, Wai H, Thu A, Khant Z, Indrasuta C, Ashley E . Malaria elimination in remote communities requires integration of malaria control activities into general health care: an observational study and interrupted time series analysis in Myanmar. BMC Med. 2018; 16(1):183. PMC: 6196466. DOI: 10.1186/s12916-018-1172-x. View