FAST Strategy-A Sustainable Administrative TB Infection Control Measure in Nigeria: Reducing Time to TB Diagnosis and Enrolment to Treatment

FAST stands for Finding, Actively, Separating, and Treating. FAST focus health care workers on the most important administrative Tuberculosis (TB) transmission control intervention: effective TB treatment reduces TB spread rapidly, even before sputum smear and culture turn negative. General outpatient department (GOPD) and inpatient clinics in most public and some private health institutions are overcrowded with long waiting times to access health care services. This has led to an increasing importance to ensure effective TB prevention and control especially in settings were Presumptive TB cases, confirmed TB cases and People living with HIV (PLHIV) are seen. This study is aimed at describing the process of FAST implementation and its effect on reduction of time to diagnosis of TB and enrolment for care at tertiary Health care facilities. A prospective study in 12 facilities of 6 states with high TB and HIV burden; adapted guidelines, standard operating procedures (SOPs) and training materials for FAST strategy; trained pool of facilitators; field tested tools; advocacy visits to health facilities; collected base line data that preceded facility level sensitization of FAST implementation. Diagnosis of TB and DR-TB was in line with the national guidelines with the use of Acid Fast Bacilli (AFB) light microscopy and GeneXpert MTB/RIF technology. Follow-up evaluations were conducted monthly by State Tuberculosis and Leprosy Control Program (STBLCP) and quarterly by National TBL Control Program (NTBLCP). Data was analyzed using Stata 13 version 1 for paired t-test (mean comparison test). Average time to diagnosis of susceptible TB using 3 sputa samples reduced from a baseline of 2.9 days in April 2014 to 1.9 days by end of September 2014. Time to treatment of susceptible TB cases diagnosed either by AFB microscopy or Xpert reduced from a baseline of 3.9 days to 1.1 days. Similarly, average time for DR-TB cases diagnosed (including patients receiving their results) reduced from 2.3 days to 1 day. Proportion of TB cases diagnosed and started on treatment increased by up to 14-56% range among different facilities. Integrating FAST into health care delivery improves early diagnosis and enrolment to care at minimal cost; facilitate TB infection control in clinic waiting areas especially in low income countries like Nigeria. FAST also has additional advantage of increasing TB case notification.


Background and Introduction
According to the 2015 Global TB report, Tuberculosis remains a major global health problem while 9.6 million people developed TB and 1.5 million died from the disease. In sub-Saharan Africa, Tuberculosis (TB) is still a great challenge to public health. Nigeria remains one of the 22 high burden countries (HBC) that accounts about 80% of the world's TB cases. From the National TB Prevalence Survey 2012, the prevalence and incidence rates of all forms of TB in 2012 are much higher than previously estimated by World Health Organization (WHO) for the same year. While "the prevalence rate now stands at 322 per 100,000 populations; the incidence rate is 338 per 100,000 populations, indicating an actual rate of TB case detection in Nigeria at approximately 17%. [1]" Similarly, "the National survey on KAP showed ≤ 29% awareness of TB in the population. [2]" "The 2010 National DR-TB prevalence survey report also revealed a prevalence of 2.9% among new cases of TB and 14.3% among previously treated cases. [3]" "In 2005, Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) estimated a total of 23,640 health facilities in Nigeria of which 85.8% are primary health care facilities, 14% secondary and 0.2% tertiary. 38% of these facilities are owned by the private sector, which provides 60% of health care in the country. By the end of 2013, Nigeria has an estimated population of 167 million with 5,389 directly observation of treatment (DOT) centers, 1,602 AFB microscopy Laboratories, 87 GeneXpert MTB/RIF sites and 1,004 Anti-Retroviral Therapy (ART) centers across the country. [4]" "Most TB transmissions occur between the onset of coughing and initiation of treatment [5]". Early diagnosis and prompt effective therapy represent the key elements in controlling the disease. Thus "diagnosis and treatment delay of TB is significant to disease prognosis and may result in more extensive disease and more complications, which leads to an increased period of infectivity in the community and higher mortality [6], [7]".
Despite the adoption of "WHO policy document on TB infection control by Nigeria in 2008 that describes the managerial, administrative, environmental and respiratory protection controls in healthcare facilities [8]", there is "weak implementation of specific recommendations for TB-IC at most TB and HIV care settings [9]". Cases of "susceptible TB and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) are being generated by transmission in overcrowded and poorly ventilated clinic waiting areas [10]". Many "HIV-co-infected clients in high-burden settings are also at risk for infection and re-infection, in addition to other patients' relatives, health care workers and staff of other facilities [11]".
As part of efforts to reduce health system delays, the NTBLCP in 2014 adopted and piloted the implementation of the FAST strategy at selected healthcare facilities with a focused approach to reducing TB or DR-TB transmission in outpatient and inpatient healthcare settings. FAST stands for Finding, Actively, Separating, and Treating. FAST focuses health care workers on the most important administrative TB transmission control intervention: effective TB treatment reduces TB spread rapidly, even before sputum smear and culture turn negative.
Implementing FAST will also contribute to intensified case findings at General medical settings (Outpatient departments, HIV/ ART clinics) where the focus is finding patients with unsuspected infectious TB and at TB settings where patients are already diagnosed with TB and the focus is finding patients with drug resistant TB in order to provide effective therapy and rapidly stop spread.
This study is aimed at describing the process of FAST implementation and its effect on reduction of time to diagnosis of TB and enrollment for care at tertiary Health care facilities.

Methodology
Based on State specific TB and HIV burden, convenient sampling was used to select 1 state from each of the 6 geo-political zones of the Federation (Abia, Akwa-Ibom, Benue, Kaduna, Taraba and Osun). Two facilities that provide TB, HIV/ART care services from each of these 6 states were then included to implement the pilot FAST strategy.
In March 2014, coordination meetings held to adapt guidelines, SOPs and training materials for FAST strategy; training of pool of facilitators from the 6 states and field testing of tools at NTBLTC Zaria for practical demonstration. This was followed with advocacy visits to health facilities, collection of base line data that preceded facility level sensitization of FAST implementation in April 2014. Diagnosis of TB and DR-TB was in line with the National Guidelines with the use of AFB light microscopy and GeneXpert MTB/RIF technology. Follow-up evaluations were conducted monthly by State TBL control program and quarterly by National TBL control Program.
At each of the clinics (GOPD, ART, DOTS, STI), a mechanism was established for referral and follow up of clients with symptoms of cough through organized cough surveillance. This involved a daily assigned health worker actively looking for otherwise unsuspected TB patients with current cough at waiting clinic areas. Identified coughers are fast tracked, further screened for symptoms suggestive of TB (fever, weight loss, night sweats) and separated from other clients to a designated well ventilated areas; sputum of those with presumptive TB promptly collected for laboratory investigations, including rapid molecular testing, as per national guidelines; and are educated on respiratory hygiene/ cough etiquettes to prevent further spread of TB.
Monthly data and information were obtained by adjusting existing national TB laboratory and clinic registers to compute average time to diagnosis and average time to treatment: a) Time to Diagnosis: The number of days from the date of patient presentation on which sputum was collected (column: Date of collection) to the date the lab result was received (column: Date result released) as recorded in the clinic presumptive TB register.
For DR-TB, the date the laboratory result was received (column: Comments) as recorded in the presumptive DR-TB register. b) Time to Treatment: The number of days from the date on which the lab result was received (column: Date registered) to the date treatment was initiated (column: Date treatment started) as recorded in the TB register.
For DR-TB, the date the lab result was received recorded in the Comments column and the date of treatment recorded in the Treatment facility referred to column.
Monthly data on "time to diagnosis" and "time to treatment" obtained were recorded in a 2 by 2 table for baseline January to December 2013 and intervention period from April to September 2014. A period of longer than 7 days was defined as a diagnosis delay and a period of longer than 2 days as a treatment delay. The time from the first consultation to the date of diagnosis was defined as 'health system's delay'. Data was collated using Microsoft excel 2013, expressed as simple percentages and proportions; pre and post intervention was analysed using Stata 13 version 1 for paired t-test (mean comparison test).
Approval to publish data used in this pilot was obtained from the ethics committee of the Federal Ministry of Health.

Discussion
Delay in identification, diagnosis and start of tuberculosis (TB) treatment increases the risk of morbidity and mortality at the individual level as well as increase in the risk of transmission at community level.
An "estimate of 10 persons become infected annually by a patient with untreated smear-positive pulmonary TB and over 20 during the natural course of untreated disease until death [12]". "In both high and low TB prevalence countries, delay in the start of TB treatment is relatively common [13], [14]".
Delays are divided into patient delay, health care system delay and total delay. Total delay was defined as the sum of the patient delay and the health care system delay. While Patient delay was defined as the period from onset of symptoms related to TB to the date when the patient first contacted health services for those symptoms, Health care system delay was defined from the date of the patient's first contact with the health services for those symptoms to the date of the start of TB treatment. "The health care system delay is assumed to be a larger problem than patient delay [15]".
Several studies that described the problem of "delay in the start of TB treatment indicated a low index of suspicion among health care providers for diagnosing TB [16], [17], [18]". Despite symptoms such as cough, weight loss and night sweat, health care providers only initiated specific TB examination after unsuccessful antibiotics treatment.
Though this study was conducted in tertiary and referral hospitals, there was a low health system delay similar to findings with mean diagnosis interval of 3.3 days and mean initiation of treatment interval of 1.4 days [19] This is contrary to findings expected at tertiary and referral hospitals with longer patient and health system delays.
The adoption of FAST strategy in this study has contributed to low health service delay due to a high degree of alertness on the side of the health workers to suspect and diagnose tuberculosis which was attributable to "the basic triaging, effective separation and fast tracking to access prompt diagnosis and early treatment [20], [21]".
In this study, instant referrals for diagnosis of a presumptive TB case in line with national algorithm that incorporates use of rapid diagnostic tests (Xpert MTB/RIF technology) and an effective mechanism for prompt release of laboratory results also played significant roles. "By ensuring prompt TB laboratory analysis and diagnosis, multiple clinic and follow up visits were reduced [22]". This on the long term contributes to reduction in the total delay. Proportion of TB cases diagnosed and started on treatment increased by up to 14-56% at some pilot facilities (table 4). A well implemented FAST strategy in addition to "intensified case detection has a great impact on improving TB infection control by reducing the waiting time in the facility [23], [24]".
As TB is the common cause of morbidity and mortality among PLHIVs, the National TBLCP integrated DOTS services in HIV/ART clinics to facilitate "one stop" service management of co-infected persons. The adoption of FAST strategy at these HIV/ART clinic waiting areas has also immensely reduced the spread of TB and simultaneously ensured prompt treatment of both conditions. Some challenges encountered during the implementation of FAST strategy included constraints of space for separation, so clients had to be fast-tracked at some facilities. Only 7 out of 12 facilities had GeneXpert machines which resulted in establishing effective linkage and referral system for sputum transportation. Coordination and supervision by state and national level was sub-optimal which necessitated regular phone calls, follow-up e-mails to access data and monitor progress of implementation. The intended gains of this strategy were deeply affected due to prolonged strike action by government health care workers for 3 out of the 6 months pilot period.

Conclusion
FAST strategy when scaled up to other facilities by improving health systems delay can contribute significantly to TB intensified case finding. FAST as an administrative TB Infection control intervention in health care facilities requires minimal resources and can be easily implemented.