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Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report | 2016

Notes from the Field: Baseline Assessment of the Use of Ebola Rapid Diagnostic Tests--Forécariah, Guinea, October-November 2015.

Jennifer Y. Huang; Frantz Jean Louis; Meredith G. Dixon; Marcel Sefu; Lon Kightlinger; Lise D. Martel; Gayatri C. Jayaraman; Abdou S. Gueye

The Ebola virus disease (Ebola) epidemic in West Africa began in Guinea in early 2014. The reemergence of Ebola and risk of ongoing, undetected transmission continues because of the potential for sexual transmission and other as yet unknown transmission pathways. On March 17, 2016, two new cases of Ebola in Guinea were confirmed by the World Health Organization. This reemergence of Ebola in Guinea is the first since the original outbreak in the country was declared over on December 29, 2015. The prefecture of Forécariah, in western Guinea, was considerably affected by Ebola in 2015, with an incidence rate of 159 cases per 100,000 persons. Guinea also has a high prevalence of malaria; in a nationwide 2012 survey, malaria prevalence was reported to be 44% among healthy children aged ≤5 years. Malaria is an important reason for seeking health care; during 2014, 34% of outpatient consultations were related to malaria.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2013

Evaluation of an External Quality Assessment Program for HIV Testing in Haiti, 2006–2011

Frantz Jean Louis; Renette Anselme; Clement Ndongmo; Josiane Buteau; Jacques Boncy; Georges Dahourou; John Vertefeuille; Barbara J. Marston; S. Arunmozhi Balajee

OBJECTIVES To evaluate an external quality assessment (EQA) program for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) rapid diagnostics testing by the Haitian National Public Health Laboratory (French acronym: LNSP). Acceptable performance was defined as any proficiency testing (PT) score more than 80%. METHODS The PT database was reviewed and analyzed to assess the testing performance of the participating laboratories and the impact of the program over time. A total of 242 laboratories participated in the EQA program from 2006 through 2011; participation increased from 70 laboratories in 2006 to 159 in 2011. RESULTS In 2006, 49 (70%) laboratories had a PT score of 80% or above; by 2011, 145 (97.5%) laboratories were proficient (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS The EQA program for HIV testing ensures quality of testing and allowed the LNSP to document improvements in the quality of HIV rapid testing over time.


Journal of AIDS and Clinical Research | 2015

Specimen Referral Network to Rapidly Scale-Up CD4 Testing: The Hub and Spoke Model for Haiti

Frantz Jean Louis; Anna Janick Osborne; Viala Jean Elias; Josiane Buteau; Jacques Boncy; Angela Elong; Amber Dismer; Vikram Sasi; Jean Wysler Domercant; Daniel Lauture; S. Arunmozhi Balajee; Barbara J. Marston

OBJECTIVES Regular and quality CD4 testing is essential to monitor disease progression in people living with HIV. In Haiti, most laboratories have limited infrastructure and financial resources and have relied on manual laboratory techniques. We report the successful implementation of a national specimen referral network to rapidly increase patient coverage with quality CD4 testing while at the same time building infrastructure for referral of additional sample types over time. METHOD Following a thorough baseline analysis of facilities, expected workload, patient volumes, cost of technology and infrastructure constraints at health institutions providing care to HIV patients, the Haitian National Public Health Laboratory designed and implemented a national specimen referral network. The specimen referral network was scaled up in a step-wise manner from July 2011 to July 2014. RESULTS Fourteen hubs serving a total of 67 healthcare facilities have been launched; in addition, 10 healthcare facilities operate FACSCount machines, 21 laboratories operate PIMA machines, and 11 healthcare facilities are still using manual CD4 tests. The number of health institutions able to access automated CD4 testing has increased from 27 to 113 (315%). Testing volume increased 76% on average. The number of patients enrolled on ART at the first healthcare facilities to join the network increased 182% within 6 months following linkage to the network. Performance on external quality assessment was acceptable at all 14 hubs. CONCLUSION A specimen referral network has enabled rapid uptake of quality CD4 testing, and served as a backbone to allow for other future tests to be scaled-up in a similar way.


African Journal of Laboratory Medicine | 2017

Implementation of broad screening with Ebola rapid diagnostic tests in Forécariah, Guinea

Frantz Jean Louis; Jennifer Y. Huang; Yacouba K. Nebie; Lamine Koivogui; Gayatri C. Jayaraman; Nadine Abiola; Amanda VanSteelandt; Mary C. Worrel; Judith Shang; Louise B. Murphy; David L. Fitter; Barbara J. Marston; Lise D. Martel

Background Laboratory-enhanced surveillance is critical for rapidly detecting the potential re-emergence of Ebola virus disease. Rapid diagnostic tests (RDT) for Ebola antigens could expand diagnostic capacity for Ebola virus disease. Objectives The Guinean National Coordination for Ebola Response conducted a pilot implementation to determine the feasibility of broad screening of patients and corpses with the OraQuick® Ebola RDT. Methods The implementation team developed protocols and trained healthcare workers to screen patients and corpses in Forécariah prefecture, Guinea, from 15 October to 30 November 2015. Data collected included number of consultations, number of fevers reported or measured, number of tests performed for patients or corpses and results of confirmatory RT-PCR testing. Data on malaria RDT results were collected for comparison. Feedback from Ebola RDT users was collected informally during supervision visits and forums. Results There were 3738 consultations at the 15 selected healthcare facilities; 74.6% of consultations were for febrile illness. Among 2787 eligible febrile patients, 2633 were tested for malaria and 1628 OraQuick® Ebola RDTs were performed. A total of 322 OraQuick® Ebola RDTs were conducted on corpses. All Ebola tests on eligible patients were negative. Conclusions Access to Ebola testing was expanded by the implementation of RDTs in an emergency situation. Feedback from Ebola RDT users and lessons learned will contribute to improving quality for RDT expansion.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2017

Strengthening National Disease Surveillance and Response—Haiti, 2010–2015

Stanley Juin; Nicolas Schaad; Donald Lafontant; Gerard A. Joseph; Ezra J. Barzilay; Jacques Boncy; Robert Barrais; Frantz Jean Louis; Nadia Lapierre Jean Charles; Salomon Corvil; Nickolsno Barthelemy; Amber Dismer; Jean Samuel Pierre; Roodly W. Archer; Mayer Antoine; Barbara J. Marston; Mark A. Katz; Patrick Dely; Paul Adrien; David L. Fitter; David W. Lowrance; Roopal Patel

Abstract. Haiti’s health system has faced many challenges over the years, with competing health priorities in the context of chronic financial and human resource limitations. As a result, the existing notifiable disease surveillance system was unable to provide the most basic epidemiologic data for public health decision-making and action. In the wake of the January 2010 earthquake, the Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population collaborated with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Pan American Health Organization, and other local and international partners to implement a functional national surveillance system. More than 7 years later, it is important to take the opportunity to reflect on progress made on surveillance and response in Haiti, including disease detection, reporting, outbreak investigation, and response. The national epidemiologic surveillance network that started with 51 sites in 2010 has been expanded to 357 sites as of December 2015. Disease outbreaks identified via the surveillance system, or other surveillance approaches, are investigated by epidemiologists trained by the Ministry of Health’s Field Epidemiology Training Program. Other related surveillance modules have been developed on the same model and electronic platform, allowing the country to document the impact of interventions, track progress, and monitor health problems. Sustainability remains the greatest challenge since most of the funding for surveillance come from external sources.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2017

Trends in Tuberculosis Case Notification and Treatment Success, Haiti, 2010-2015.

Macarthur Charles; Milo Richard; Patrice Joseph; Margarette R Bury; Georges Perrin; Frantz Jean Louis; David L. Fitter; Barbara J. Marston; Varough Deyde; Jacques Boncy; Willy Morose; Jean W. Pape; David W. Lowrance

Abstract. Since the 2010 earthquake, tuberculosis (TB) control has been a major priority for health sector response and recovery efforts in Haiti. The goal of this study was to analyze trends in TB case notification in Haiti from the aggregate data reported by the National TB Control Program to understand the effects of such efforts. A total of 95,745 TB patients were registered for treatment in Haiti between 2010 and 2015. Three regions, the West, Artibonite, and North departments accounted for 68% of the TB cases notified during the period. Patients in the 15–34 age groups represented 53% (50,560) of all cases. Case notification rates of all forms of TB increased from 142.7/100,000 in 2010 to 153.4 in 2015, peaking at 163.4 cases/100,000 in 2013. Case notification for smear-positive pulmonary TB increased from 85.5 cases/100,000 to 105.7 cases/100,000, whereas treatment success rates remained stable at 79–80% during the period. Active TB case finding efforts in high-risk communities and the introduction of new diagnostics have contributed to increasing TB case notification trends in Haiti from 2010 to 2015. Targeted interventions and novel strategies are being implemented to reach high-risk populations and underserved communities.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2017

Building and Rebuilding: The National Public Health Laboratory Systems and Services Before and After the Earthquake and Cholera Epidemic, Haiti, 2009-2015.

Frantz Jean Louis; Josiane Buteau; Jacques Boncy; Renette Anselme; Magalie Stanislas; Mary C. Nagel; Stanley Juin; Macarthur Charles; Robert Burris; Eva Antoine; Chunfu Yang; Mireille Kalou; John Vertefeuille; Barbara J. Marston; David W. Lowrance; Varough Deyde

Abstract. Before the 2010 devastating earthquake and cholera outbreak, Haiti’s public health laboratory systems were weak and services were limited. There was no national laboratory strategic plan and only minimal coordination across the laboratory network. Laboratory capacity was further weakened by the destruction of over 25 laboratories and testing sites at the departmental and peripheral levels and the loss of life among the laboratory health-care workers. However, since 2010, tremendous progress has been made in building stronger laboratory infrastructure and training a qualified public health laboratory workforce across the country, allowing for decentralization of access to quality-assured services. Major achievements include development and implementation of a national laboratory strategic plan with a formalized and strengthened laboratory network; introduction of automation of testing to ensure better quality of results and diversify the menu of tests to effectively respond to outbreaks; expansion of molecular testing for tuberculosis, human immunodeficiency virus, malaria, diarrheal and respiratory diseases; establishment of laboratory-based surveillance of epidemic-prone diseases; and improvement of the overall quality of testing. Nonetheless, the progress and gains made remain fragile and require the full ownership and continuous investment from the Haitian government to sustain these successes and achievements.


Journal of AIDS and Clinical Research | 2016

Low Prevalence of Cryptococcal Antigenemia among Patients Infected withHIV/AIDS in Haiti

Frantz Jean Louis; Jocelyne Alboth Andre; Georges Perrin; Jean Wysler Domercant; Kesner Francois; Daniella Azor; Josiane Buteau; Jacques Boncy; Robert Burris; David W. Lowrance; Barbara J. Marston

Cryptococcal meningitis is a common opportunistic infection among persons with advanced HIV-associated immunosuppression and is associated with high mortality. The prevalence of asymptomatic cryptococcal antigenemia (CrAg) can inform the potential utility of screening and pre-emptive treatment prevention strategies. We assessed CrAg prevalence in a cohort of patients infected with HIV at 28 health facilities from February to September 2014 in order to inform Haitian national clinical guidelines. Of 13,000 patients that underwent CD4 cell count, 1,025 (7.9%) had a count ≤200 cells/mm3. Of these, 11 (1.1%) were CrAg positive. The CrAg positivity rate among patients with CD4 cell counts <100 cell/mm3 was 1.8%. Patients with CD4 cell counts <50 cells/mm3 had the highest CrAg rate (2.3%). CrAg prevalence was low but still warranted a CrAg screening and pre-emptive therapy approach for people infected with HIV with CD4 cell counts <100 cell/mm3 in Haiti.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Virologic outcome among patients receiving antiretroviral therapy at five hospitals in Haiti

Frantz Jean Louis; Josiane Buteau; Kesner Francois; Erin N. Hulland; Jean Wysler Domercant; Chunfu Yang; Jacques Boncy; Robert Burris; Valerie Pelletier; Nicholas Wagar; Varough Deyde; David W. Lowrance; Macarthur Charles

Introduction Viral load (VL) assessment is the preferred method for diagnosing and confirming virologic failure for patients on antiretroviral therapy (ART). We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study to evaluate the virologic suppression rate among patients on ART for ≥6 months in five hospitals around Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Methods Plasma VL was measured and patients with VL <1,000 copies/mL were defined as virologically suppressed. A second VL test was performed within at least six months of the first test. Factors associated with virologic suppression were analyzed using logistic regression models accounting for site-level clustering using complex survey procedures. Results Data were analyzed for 2,313 patients on ART for six months or longer between July 2013 and February 2015. Among them, 1,563 (67.6%) achieved virologic suppression at the first VL test. A second VL test was performed within at least six months for 718 (31.0%) of the patients. Of the 459 patients with an initial HIV-1 RNA <1,000 copies/mL who had a second VL performed, 394 (85.8%) maintained virologic suppression. Virologic suppression was negatively associated with male gender (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 0.80, 95% CI: 0.74–0.0.86), 23 to 35 months on ART (aOR:0.72[0.54–0.96]), baseline CD4 counts of 201–500 cells/mm3 and 200 cells/mm3 or lower (aORs: 0.77 [0.62–0.95] and 0.80 [0.66–0.98], respectively), poor adherence (aOR: 0.69 [0.59–0.81]), and TB co-infection (aOR: 0.73 [0.55–0.97]). Conclusions This study showed that over two-thirds of the patients in this evaluation achieved virologic suppression after ≥ six months on ART and the majority of them remained suppressed. These results reinforce the importance of expanding access to HIV-1 viral load testing in Haiti for monitoring ART outcomes.


International Journal of Dermatology | 2014

Tungiasis in Haiti: a case series of 383 patients

Shesly J. Louis; Tara Bronsnick; Frantz Jean Louis; Babar Rao

Tungiasis is endemic in poverty‐stricken communities of South and Central America, Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean. This ectoparasitosis, caused by the female sand flea Tunga penetrans, is associated with considerable longterm morbidity in severely affected patients, including toe deformation and limited mobility. In Haiti, tungiasis is poorly documented but is known to occur. This study is the first formal investigation of tungiasis in Haiti.

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Barbara J. Marston

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Jacques Boncy

Public health laboratory

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David W. Lowrance

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Josiane Buteau

Public health laboratory

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Jean Wysler Domercant

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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David L. Fitter

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Robert Burris

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Varough Deyde

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Amber Dismer

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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