干扰素γ释放试验检测潜伏结核感染:卫生技术评估。

Q1 Medicine
Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series Pub Date : 2024-12-12 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:许多感染结核分枝杆菌复合体(引起结核病的细菌[TB])的人有一个被称为潜伏结核感染(LTBI)的非活动性感染阶段。患有LTBI的人有发展为活动性结核病的风险。筛查和治疗LTBI患者是预防不良健康结果、降低结核病重新激活和在社区进一步传播风险的重要组成部分。我们对用于检测LTBI的干扰素- γ释放法(IGRA)进行了卫生技术评估,并与标准结核菌素皮肤试验(TST)进行了比较,以评估诊断准确性、成本效益、公共资助的预算影响以及卫生保健提供者的偏好和价值观。方法:我们对临床证据进行了系统的文献检索,作为系统综述的概述。我们报告了已确定的综述的发现,包括它们对证据体的质量评估。我们对经济证据进行了系统的文献检索,并纳入了已发表的加拿大成本效益研究。我们根据建议分级评估、发展和评价(GRADE)工作组标准评估了证据体的质量。我们开发了一个概率决策树模型来估计IGRA策略与单独TST在1年内在符合条件的人群亚组中的增量成本。IGRA作为单一试验和顺序途径与结核菌素皮肤试验(TST;测试顺序取决于种群的类型)。根据2022年发布的加拿大结核病标准(以下简称标准),我们考虑了LTBI高风险的亚人群,他们更倾向于IGRA;例如,接种过卡介苗的人,如接种过卡介苗的移民和接触者调查中确定的人。我们还考虑了患有合并症或正在接受可能导致免疫功能低下的治疗的人,因此可能会被错误地检测为阴性。我们估计了安大略省公共资助IGRA测试的5年预算影响(2024年CAD)。为了了解IGRA的潜在价值,我们与卫生保健提供者讨论了需要进行LTBI结核病检测的人。我们试图联系有IGRA或TST经验的人,但没有收到任何反馈。结果:我们在临床证据综述中纳入了12项系统综述,其中包括500多项独特的初步研究,并发现了与标准中概述的IGRA用途一致的良好证据。本综述综述了现有证据的诊断准确性和IGRA对LTBI的临床应用。由于具有一贯的高特异性,干扰素- γ释放试验被发现有很好的证据作为LTBI的常规测试。综述报告,与一般人群相比,具有潜在免疫抑制条件的人群(例如,HIV阳性或接受过器官移植的人,或正在接受癌症治疗或透析的人)的敏感性略低。然而,与TST(结核病的标准测试)相比,IGRA似乎有更少的假阳性结果,这表明在头对头比较中,两种LTBI测试均呈阳性的患者发生活动性结核病的风险差异更低。这在免疫功能低下的人群中尤为明显,在儿童和老年人(例如养老院的人)以及接受过抗结核疫苗(即卡介苗)接种的人群中也观察到。此外,IGRA可能对免疫功能低下、有TST假阴性风险的患者提供信息,因为它产生不确定的结果,表明可能需要进一步的临床研究。我们纳入了来自加拿大的5项经济研究(使用公共付款人的观点),这些研究发现IGRA,无论是作为TST后的顺序测试还是作为独立测试,对于标准中确定的高风险人群的LTBI,与单独的TST相比,都具有成本效益或节省成本。所有被回顾的研究都是高质量的,其中3项研究直接适用于安大略省的背景(GRADE:高)。因此,我们没有对安大略省进行初步的经济评估。我们的参考病例预算影响分析显示,未来5年安大略省所有被检查亚群IGRA的公共资助与额外费用相关,从299万美元(单独IGRA)到1880万美元(连续途径IGRA与TST)。这些总估计数包括某些亚群的潜在节省和其他亚群的额外费用。在针对特定人群的分析中,我们估计节省了1美元的成本。 在接种过bcg疫苗的移民或通过接触者调查发现的接种过bcg疫苗的人群中,5年内接受公共资助IGRA检测的人数达到6300万或更高(这些人仅通过TST检测容易出现假阳性结果)。这些费用的节省是由于后续评估和治疗费用的减少(由于预防LTBI重新激活)。我们发现,在免疫功能低下人群中,公共资助的IGRA检测在5年内的额外费用约为626万美元或更高,这是由于对那些先前被错误地确定为阴性的人增加了适当的医学评估。在敏感性分析中,如果我们假设LTBI在免疫功能低下人群中有很高的机会重新激活为活动性结核病,那么IGRA检测可以节省成本。我们调查的卫生保健提供者对IGRA有积极的评价,并表示它是患者首选的LTBI测试,部分原因是该测试只需要一次办公室就诊(与TST需要多次就诊相比),从而减少了交通、语言、托儿和就业安排等障碍的影响。结论:干扰素- γ释放测定检测在符合标准推荐使用的人群中具有良好的诊断准确性,并且具有成本效益或节省成本。我们估计,安大略省所有被检查人群的IGRA公共资助将导致5年内299万至1880万美元的额外费用,具体取决于该测试的使用方式。在人群特异性分析中,我们估计在符合条件的接种过bcg疫苗的移民人群或通过接触者调查确定的接种过bcg疫苗的人群中进行IGRA检测可节省163万美元或更高的成本。保健从业人员更倾向于IGRA,特别是为了支持那些可能对现有替代测试(例如TST)有困难的人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Interferon-Gamma Release Assay Testing for Latent Tuberculosis Infection: A Health Technology Assessment.

Background: Many people infected with the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (the bacteria that cause tuberculosis [TB]) have an inactive stage of infection known as latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI). A person with LTBI is at risk of developing active TB. Screening for, and treating people with, LTBI is an important part of preventing adverse health outcomes, reducing the risk of reactivation and the further spread of tuberculosis in a community. We conducted a health technology assessment of interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA) for the detection of LTBI, compared to the standard tuberculin skin test (TST) to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy, cost-effectiveness, the budget impact of publicly funding, and health care provider preferences and values.

Methods: We performed a systematic literature search of the clinical evidence as an overview of systematic reviews. We reported the findings of the identified reviews, including their quality assessment of the body of evidence. We performed a systematic literature search of the economic evidence and included published Canadian cost-effectiveness studies. We assessed the quality of the body of evidence according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) Working Group criteria. We developed a probabilistic decision-tree model to estimate the incremental costs of IGRA strategies versus TST alone over 1 year in eligible population subgroups. IGRA was examined as a single test and in a sequential pathway with tuberculin skin test (TST; the test order depended on the type of population). We considered subpopulations at high risk of LTBI for whom IGRA would be preferred, as indicated by the Canadian TB Standards published in 2022 (hereinafter, the Standards); e.g., people who received a Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine, such as BCG-vaccinated immigrants and people identified in contact investigations. We also considered people with comorbid conditions or who were undergoing treatments that may cause low immune function and, hence, may test incorrectly negative. We estimated the total 5-year budget impact (in 2024 CAD) for publicly funding IGRA testing in Ontario. To contextualize the potential value of IGRA, we spoke with health care providers about people requiring TB testing for LTBI. We attempted to reach out to people who had experience with IGRA or TST but did not receive any feedback.

Results: We included 12 systematic reviews that included over 500 unique primary studies in the clinical evidence overview of reviews and found good evidence aligned with the uses of IGRA outlined in the Standards. This overview of reviews summarizes the existing evidence on diagnostic accuracy and the clinical utility of IGRA for LTBI. Interferon-gamma release assay was found to have good evidence as a rule-in test for LTBI due to consistently high specificity. The reviews reported slightly lower sensitivity among people who have underlying immunosuppression conditions (e.g., people who are HIV positive or have received an organ transplant, or are on cancer treatment or dialysis) compared to a more general population. However, compared to TST (the standard test for TB), IGRA appears to have fewer false-positive results, as signaled by a lower risk difference of developing active TB among those who tested positive on both LTBI tests in head-to-head comparisons. This was particularly notable in immunocompromised populations and was also observed in children and the elderly (e.g., people in nursing homes) and those who have received an anti-tuberculin vaccination known as the BCG vaccine.Additionally, IGRA may be informative for people with immunocompromising conditions who are at risk of a false-negative result from a TST, as it yields indeterminate findings, signaling that further clinical investigation may be needed.We included 5 economic studies from Canada (using a public payer perspective), which found that IGRA, either as a sequential test following TST or as a standalone test, was cost-effective or cost-saving compared with TST alone for LTBI in high-risk populations as identified in the Standards. All reviewed studies were of good quality and 3 studies were directly applicable to the Ontario context (GRADE: High). Therefore, we did not conduct a primary economic evaluation for Ontario.Our reference case budget impact analysis showed that publicly funding IGRA in Ontario in all examined subpopulations over the next 5 years was associated with additional costs ranging from $2.99 million (IGRA alone) to $18.80 million (IGRA in sequential pathways with TST). These overall estimates include potential savings in some subpopulations and additional costs in others. In the population-specific analyses, we estimated cost savings of $1.63 million or higher over 5 years with publicly funded IGRA testing in BCG-vaccinated immigrants or BCG-vaccinated people identified via contact investigations (who are susceptible to a false positive result with the TST alone). These cost-savings resulted from reductions in costs of follow-up evaluation and treatment (due to prevention of reactivated LTBI). We found additional costs of about $6.26 million or higher over 5 years with publicly funded IGRA testing in immunocompromised people due to increased appropriate medical evaluations for those who were previously incorrectly identified as negative. In sensitivity analyses, if we assumed a high chance of reactivation of LTBI into active TB in immunocompromised populations, then IGRA testing resulted in cost savings.Health care providers who we surveyed had positive comments about IGRA, and expressed it as patients' preferred test for LTBI, partly because this test requires only 1 office visit (compared to the multiple visits needed for TST), thus reducing the effect of barriers such as transportation, language, childcare and employment arrangements.

Conclusions: Interferon-gamma release assay testing was found to have good diagnostic accuracy and to be cost-effective or cost-saving for LTBI in populations aligned with the recommended uses of the Standards. We estimate that publicly funding IGRA in Ontario for all examined population subgroups would result in additional costs of between $2.99 million and $18.80 million over 5 years, depending on how the test is used. In the population-specific analyses, we estimate a cost savings of $1.63 million or higher with IGRA testing in eligible BCG-vaccinated immigrant populations or BCG-vaccinated people identified via contact investigations. There was a preference for IGRA among health care practitioners, particularly to support people who may have challenges with the available alternative tests (e.g., TST).

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Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series
Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
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