Spatial variation in time to diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis in Bihar, India.

Emily S Nightingale, Joy Bindroo, Pushkar Dubey, Khushbu Priyamvada, Aritra Das, Caryn Bern, Sridhar Srikantiah, Ashok Kumar, Mary M Cameron, Tim C D Lucas, Sadhana Sharma, Graham F Medley, Oliver J Brady
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Abstract

Background: Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a debilitating and-without treatment-fatal parasitic disease which burdens the most impoverished communities in northeastern India. Control and ultimately, elimination of VL depends heavily on prompt case detection. However, a proportion of VL cases remain undiagnosed many months after symptom onset. Delay to diagnosis increases the chance of onward transmission, and poses a risk of resurgence in populations with waning immunity. We analysed the spatial variation of delayed diagnosis of VL in Bihar, India and aimed to understand the potential driving factors of these delays.

Methods: The spatial distribution of time to diagnosis was explored using a Bayesian hierarchical model fit to 4270 geo-located cases notified between January 2018 and July 2019 through routine surveillance. Days between symptoms meeting clinical criteria (14-day fever) and diagnosis were assumed to be Poisson-distributed, adjusting for individual- and village-level characteristics. Residual variance was modelled with an explicit spatial structure. Cumulative delays were estimated under different scenarios of active case detection coverage.

Results: The 4270 cases analysed were found to be prone to excessive delays in areas outside existing endemic 'hot spots'. After accounting for differences associated with age, HIV status and mode of detection (active versus passive surveillance), cases diagnosed within recently affected (≥ 1 case reported in the previous year) blocks and villages experienced shorter delays on average (by 13% [2.9-21.7%] (95% credible interval) and 7% [1.3-13.1%], respectively) than those in non-recently-affected areas.

Conclusions: Delays to VL diagnosis when incidence is low could influence whether transmission of the disease could be interrupted or resurges. Prioritising and narrowing surveillance to high-burden areas may increase the likelihood of excessive delays in diagnosis in peripheral areas. Active surveillance driven by observed incidence may lead to missing the risk posed by as-yet-undiagnosed cases in low-endemic areas, and such surveillance could be insufficient for achieving and sustaining elimination.

印度比哈尔邦内脏利什曼病诊断时间的空间差异。
背景:内脏利什曼病(VL)是一种使人衰弱且无法治疗的致命寄生虫病,是印度东北部最贫困社区的负担。控制并最终消除VL在很大程度上取决于及时发现病例。然而,部分VL病例在症状出现后数月仍未确诊。延误诊断增加了进一步传播的机会,并在免疫力下降的人群中造成卷土重来的风险。我们分析了印度比哈尔邦VL延迟诊断的空间变化,旨在了解这些延迟的潜在驱动因素。方法:采用贝叶斯层次模型拟合2018年1月至2019年7月通过常规监测报告的4270例地理定位病例,探讨诊断时间的空间分布。符合临床标准的症状(发热14天)和诊断之间的天数假定为泊松分布,并根据个人和村庄水平的特征进行调整。残差方差用明确的空间结构建模。在不同的主动病例检测覆盖率情况下,估计了累积延迟。结果:分析了4270例病例,发现在现有流行“热点”以外的地区容易出现过度延误。在考虑了与年龄、艾滋病毒状况和检测方式(主动与被动监测)相关的差异后,在最近受影响(上一年报告病例≥1例)的街区和村庄诊断出的病例平均比未受影响地区的病例延迟更短(分别为13%[2.9-21.7%](95%可信区间)和7%[1.3-13.1%])。结论:在发病率较低的情况下,延误VL的诊断可能会影响疾病的传播是否能够中断或复发。将监测重点放在高负担地区并将监测范围缩小,可能会增加外围地区诊断过度延误的可能性。由观察到的发病率驱动的主动监测可能导致忽视低流行地区尚未确诊病例所构成的风险,而且这种监测可能不足以实现和维持消除。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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