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Featured researches published by Gerard de Vries.
European Respiratory Journal | 2015
Knut Lönnroth; Giovanni Battista Migliori; Ibrahim Abubakar; Lia D'Ambrosio; Gerard de Vries; Roland Diel; Paul Douglas; Dennis Falzon; Marc Andre Gaudreau; Delia Goletti; Edilberto R. González Ochoa; Philip A. LoBue; Alberto Matteelli; Howard Njoo; Ivan Solovic; Alistair Story; Tamara Tayeb; Marieke J. van der Werf; Diana Weil; Jean-Pierre Zellweger; Mohamed Abdel Aziz; Mohamed R M Al Lawati; Stefano Aliberti; Wouter Arrazola de Oñate; Draurio Barreira; Vineet Bhatia; Francesco Blasi; Amy Bloom; Judith Bruchfeld; Francesco Castelli
This paper describes an action framework for countries with low tuberculosis (TB) incidence (<100 TB cases per million population) that are striving for TB elimination. The framework sets out priority interventions required for these countries to progress first towards “pre-elimination” (<10 cases per million) and eventually the elimination of TB as a public health problem (less than one case per million). TB epidemiology in most low-incidence countries is characterised by a low rate of transmission in the general population, occasional outbreaks, a majority of TB cases generated from progression of latent TB infection (LTBI) rather than local transmission, concentration to certain vulnerable and hard-to-reach risk groups, and challenges posed by cross-border migration. Common health system challenges are that political commitment, funding, clinical expertise and general awareness of TB diminishes as TB incidence falls. The framework presents a tailored response to these challenges, grouped into eight priority action areas: 1) ensure political commitment, funding and stewardship for planning and essential services; 2) address the most vulnerable and hard-to-reach groups; 3) address special needs of migrants and cross-border issues; 4) undertake screening for active TB and LTBI in TB contacts and selected high-risk groups, and provide appropriate treatment; 5) optimise the prevention and care of drug-resistant TB; 6) ensure continued surveillance, programme monitoring and evaluation and case-based data management; 7) invest in research and new tools; and 8) support global TB prevention, care and control. The overall approach needs to be multisectorial, focusing on equitable access to high-quality diagnosis and care, and on addressing the social determinants of TB. Because of increasing globalisation and population mobility, the response needs to have both national and global dimensions. Action framework for countries with low tuberculosis incidence: a coherent approach for eliminating tuberculosis http://ow.ly/H03ZZ
European Respiratory Journal | 2015
Haileyesus Getahun; Alberto Matteelli; Ibrahim Abubakar; Mohamed Abdel Aziz; Annabel Baddeley; Draurio Barreira; Saskia Den Boon; Susana Marta Borroto Gutierrez; Judith Bruchfeld; Erlina Burhan; Solange Cavalcante; Rolando Cedillos; Richard E. Chaisson; Cynthia Bin Eng Chee; Lucy Chesire; Elizabeth L. Corbett; Masoud Dara; Justin T. Denholm; Gerard de Vries; Dennis Falzon; Nathan Ford; Margaret Gale-Rowe; Chris Gilpin; Enrico Girardi; Un Yeong Go; Darshini Govindasamy; Alison D. Grant; Malgorzata Grzemska; Ross Harris; C. Robert Horsburgh
Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) is characterised by the presence of immune responses to previously acquired Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection without clinical evidence of active tuberculosis (TB). Here we report evidence-based guidelines from the World Health Organization for a public health approach to the management of LTBI in high risk individuals in countries with high or middle upper income and TB incidence of <100 per 100 000 per year. The guidelines strongly recommend systematic testing and treatment of LTBI in people living with HIV, adult and child contacts of pulmonary TB cases, patients initiating anti-tumour necrosis factor treatment, patients receiving dialysis, patients preparing for organ or haematological transplantation, and patients with silicosis. In prisoners, healthcare workers, immigrants from high TB burden countries, homeless persons and illicit drug users, systematic testing and treatment of LTBI is conditionally recommended, according to TB epidemiology and resource availability. Either commercial interferon-gamma release assays or Mantoux tuberculin skin testing could be used to test for LTBI. Chest radiography should be performed before LTBI treatment to rule out active TB disease. Recommended treatment regimens for LTBI include: 6 or 9 month isoniazid; 12 week rifapentine plus isoniazid; 3–4 month isoniazid plus rifampicin; or 3–4 month rifampicin alone. Guidelines on LTBI for low TB incidence countries – essential element of the @WHO #EndTB strategy and TB elimination http://ow.ly/RW8xn
European Respiratory Journal | 2014
Roland Diel; Joris Vandeputte; Gerard de Vries; Jonathan Stillo; Maryse Wanlin; Albert Nienhaus
Without better vaccines it is unlikely that tuberculosis (TB) will ever be eliminated. An investment of ∼€560 million is considered necessary to develop a new, effective vaccine in the European Union (EU). However, less is known about the costs of TB disease in the EU. We performed a systematic review of literature and institutional websites addressing the 27 EU members to summarise cost data. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE and Cochrane bibliographies for relevant articles. Combining direct and indirect costs, we arrived at an average per-TB case costs in the original EU-15 states plus Cyprus, Malta and Slovenia of €10 282 for drug-susceptible TB, €57 213 for multidrug resistant (MDR)-TB and €170 744 for extensively drug resistant (XDR)-TB. In the remaining new EU states, costs amounted to €3427 for drug-susceptible TB and €24 166 for MDR-TB/XDR-TB. For the 70 340 susceptible TB cases, 1488 MDR-TB and 136 XDR-TB cases notified in 2011 costs of €536 890 315 accumulated in 2012. In the same year, the 103 104 disability-adjusted life years caused by these cases, when stated in monetary terms, amounted to a total of €5 361 408 000. Thus, the resulting economic burden of TB in the EU clearly outweighs the cost of investing in more efficient vaccines against TB. The economic burden of tuberculosis in the EU outweights the cost of investing in more efficient vaccines against tuberculosis http://ow.ly/qXW4s
European Respiratory Journal | 2016
Simon Tiberi; Marie Christine Payen; Giovanni Sotgiu; Lia D'Ambrosio; Valentina Alarcon Guizado; Jan-Willem C. Alffenaar; Marcos Abdo Arbex; Jose A. Caminero; Rosella Centis; Saverio De Lorenzo; Mina Gaga; Gina Gualano; Aurora Jazmín Roby Arias; Anna Scardigli; Alena Skrahina; Ivan Solovic; Giorgia Sulis; Marina Tadolini; Onno W. Akkerman; Edith Alarcon Arrascue; Alena Aleska; Vera Avchinko; Eduardo Henrique Bonini; Félix Antonio Chong Marín; Lorena Collahuazo López; Gerard de Vries; Simone Dore; Heinke Kunst; Alberto Matteelli; Charalampos Moschos
No large study has ever evaluated the efficacy, safety and tolerability of meropenem/clavulanate to treat multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR- and XDR-TB). The aim of this observational study was to evaluate the therapeutic contribution, effectiveness, safety and tolerability profile of meropenem/clavulanate added to a background regimen when treating MDR- and XDR-TB cases. Patients treated with a meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimen (n=96) showed a greater drug resistance profile than those exposed to a meropenem/clavulanate-sparing regimen (n=168): in the former group XDR-TB was more frequent (49% versus 6.0%, p<0.0001) and the median (interquartile range (IQR)) number of antibiotic resistances was higher (8 (6–9) versus 5 (4–6)). Patients were treated with a meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimen for a median (IQR) of 85 (49–156) days. No statistically significant differences were observed in the overall MDR-TB cohort and in the subgroups with and without the XDR-TB patients; in particular, sputum smear and culture conversion rates were similar in XDR-TB patients exposed to meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimens (88.0% versus 100.0%, p=1.00 and 88.0% versus 100.0%, p=1.00, respectively). Only six cases reported adverse events attributable to meropenem/clavulanate (four of them then restarting treatment). The nondifferent outcomes and bacteriological conversion rate observed in cases who were more severe than controls might imply that meropenem/clavulanate could be active in treating MDR- and XDR-TB cases. Meropenem/clavulanate is effective and safe to treat MDR- and XDR-TB in comparison with controls http://ow.ly/XG75j
European Respiratory Journal | 2016
Simon Tiberi; Giovanni Sotgiu; Lia D'Ambrosio; Rosella Centis; Marcos Abdo Arbex; Edith Alarcon Arrascue; Jan-Willem C. Alffenaar; Jose A. Caminero; Mina Gaga; Gina Gualano; Alena Skrahina; Ivan Solovic; Giorgia Sulis; Marina Tadolini; Valentina Alarcon Guizado; Saverio De Lorenzo; Aurora Jazmín Roby Arias; Anna Scardigli; Onno W. Akkerman; Alena Aleksa; Janina Artsukevich; Vera Auchynka; Eduardo Henrique Bonini; Félix Antonio Chong Marín; Lorena Collahuazo López; Gerard de Vries; Simone Dore; Heinke Kunst; Alberto Matteelli; Charalampos Moschos
No large study to date has ever evaluated the effectiveness, safety and tolerability of imipenem/clavulanate versus meropenem/clavulanate to treat multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR- and XDR-TB). The aim of this observational study was to compare the therapeutic contribution of imipenem/clavulanate versus meropenem/clavulanate added to background regimens to treat MDR- and XDR-TB cases. 84 patients treated with imipenem/clavulanate-containing regimens showed a similar median number of antibiotic resistances (8 versus 8) but more fluoroquinolone resistance (79.0% versus 48.9%, p<0.0001) and higher XDR-TB prevalence (67.9% versus 49.0%, p=0.01) in comparison with 96 patients exposed to meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimens. Patients were treated with imipenem/clavulanate- and meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimens for a median (interquartile range) of 187 (60–428) versus 85 (49–156) days, respectively. Statistically significant differences were observed on sputum smear and culture conversion rates (79.7% versus 94.8%, p=0.02 and 71.9% versus 94.8%, p<0.0001, respectively) and on success rates (59.7% versus 77.5%, p=0.03). Adverse events to imipenem/clavulanate and meropenem/clavulanate were reported in 5.4% and 6.5% of cases only. Our study suggests that meropenem/clavulanate is more effective than imipenem/clavulanate in treating MDR/XDR-TB patients. Meropenem/clavulanate is safe and more effective than imipenem/clavulanate in treating MDR and XDR-TB patients http://ow.ly/Z4S2o
European Respiratory Journal | 2016
Gerard de Vries; Job van Rest; Wieneke Meijer; Bert Wolters; Rob van Hest
In low tuberculosis (TB) incidence countries foreign-born patients constitute a high percentage of the TB burden, up to 90% in Scandinavian countries [1] and 73% in the Netherlands in 2014 [2]. Several European Union (EU) countries have developed screening strategies to identify TB in migrants at an early stage and prevent transmission, but there is no uniform EU policy [3–5]. In the Netherlands, TB screening of migrants has been stipulated in the Aliens Act since 1966. At that time, screening was mainly carried out for migrant workers from Southern European countries, Morocco and Turkey. Since the 1990s, TB screening has increasingly included immigrants and asylum seekers from other countries in the world. For the screening of asylum seekers a mobile radiography screening programme has been in place since 1992 with national coverage [6]. The annual overall yield of TB screening has been well above 200 cases per 100 000 persons screened until a few years ago [6, 7]. It declined to 85 cases per 100 000 persons screened in 2014, due to the high number of asylum seekers from countries with traditionally low TB incidence rates such as Iran, Iraq and, predominantly, Syria [2]. Screening asylum seekers from areas with a TB incidence of <50 per 100 000 had a low yield in the Netherlands http://ow.ly/Yf2PT
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
Simon Tiberi; Giovanni Sotgiu; Lia D'Ambrosio; Rosella Centis; Marcos Abdo Arbex; Edith Alarcon Arrascue; Jan-Willem C. Alffenaar; Jose A. Caminero; Mina Gaga; Gina Gualano; Alena Skrahina; Ivan Solovic; Giorgia Sulis; Marina Tadolini; Valentina Alarcon Guizado; Saverio De Lorenzo; Aurora Jazmín Roby Arias; Anna Scardigli; Onno W. Akkerman; Alena Aleksa; Janina Artsukevich; Vera Avchinko; Eduardo Henrique Bonini; Félix Antonio Chong Marín; Lorena Collahuazo López; Gerard de Vries; Simone Dore; Heinke Kunst; Alberto Matteelli; Charalampos Moschos
Simon Tiberi, Giovanni Sotgiu, Lia D’Ambrosio, Rosella Centis, Marcos Abdo Arbex, Edith Alarcon Arrascue, Jan Willem Alffenaar, Jose A. Caminero, Mina Gaga, Gina Gualano, Alena Skrahina, Ivan Solovic, Giorgia Sulis, Marina Tadolini, Valentina Alarcon Guizado, Saverio De Lorenzo, Aurora Jazmin Roby Arias, Anna Scardigli, Onno W. Akkerman, Alena Aleksa, Janina Artsukevich, Vera Avchinko, Eduardo Henrique Bonini, Felix Antonio Chong Marin, Lorena Collahuazo Lopez, Gerard de Vries, Simone Dore, Heinke Kunst, Alberto Matteelli, Charalampos Moschos, Fabrizio Palmieri, Apostolos Papavasileiou, Marie-Christine Payen, Andrea Piana, Antonio Spanevello, Dante Vargas Vasquez, Pietro Viggiani, Veronica White, Alimuddin Zumla and Giovanni Battista Migliori
European Respiratory Journal | 2013
Rob van Hest; Csaba Ködmön; Suzanne Verver; Connie Erkens; Masja Straetemans; Davide Manissero; Gerard de Vries
Treatment success measured by treatment outcome monitoring (TOM) is a key programmatic output of tuberculosis (TB) control programmes. We performed a systematic literature review on national-level TOM in the 30 European Union (EU)/European Economic Areas (EEA) countries to summarise methods used to collect and report data on TOM. Online reference bibliographic databases PubMed/MEDLINE and EMBASE were searched to identify relevant indexed and non-indexed literature published between January 2000 and August 2010. The search strategy resulted in 615 potentially relevant indexed citations, of which 27 full-text national studies (79 data sets) were included for final analysis. The selected studies were performed in 10 EU/EEA countries and gave a fragmented impression of TOM in the EU/EEA. Publication year, study period, sample size, databases, definitions, variables, patient and outcome categories, and population subgroups varied widely, portraying a very heterogeneous picture. This review confirmed previous reports of considerable heterogeneity in publications of TOM results across EU/EEA countries. PubMed/MEDLINE and EMBASE indexed studies are not a suitable instrument to measure representative TOM results for the 30 EU/EEA countries. Uniform and complete reporting to the centralised European Surveillance System will produce the most timely and reliable results of TB treatment outcomes in the EU/EEA.
BMC Infectious Diseases | 2009
Gerard de Vries; Reinier M. van Hest; Conny Burdo; Dick van Soolingen; Jan Hendrik Richardus
BackgroundDNA fingerprinting of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates offers better opportunities to study links between tuberculosis (TB) cases and can highlight relevant issues in urban TB control in low-endemic countries.MethodsA medium-sized molecular cluster of TB cases with identical DNA fingerprints was used for the development of a visual presentation of epidemiologic links between cases.ResultsOf 32 cases, 17 (53%) were linked to the index case, and 11 (34%) to a secondary case. The remaining four (13%) could not be linked and were classified as possibly caused by the index patient. Of the 21 cases related to the index case, TB developed within one year of the index diagnosis in 11 patients (52%), within one to two years in four patients (19%), and within two to five years in six patients (29%).ConclusionCluster analysis underscored several issues for TB control in an urban setting, such as the recognition of the outbreak, the importance of reinfections, the impact of delayed diagnosis, the contribution of pub-related transmissions and its value for decision-making to extend contact investigations. Visualising cases in a cluster diagram was particularly useful in finding transmission locations and the similarities and links between patients.
European Respiratory Journal | 2016
Connie Erkens; Erika Slump; Maurits Verhagen; Henrieke Schimmel; Gerard de Vries; Frank Cobelens; Susan van den Hof
Targeted diagnosis and treatment of latent tuberculosis (TB) infection (LTBI) among persons with a high risk of exposure to TB or of developing TB when infected has been performed and monitored routinely in the Netherlands since 1993. We describe trends in target groups, diagnostic methods and treatment regimens, and explore determinants for treatment initiation, treatment completion and adverse events. In total, 37 729 persons were registered with LTBI from 1993 to 2013, of whom 28 931 (77%) started preventive treatment; 82% of those completed preventive treatment and 8% stopped preventive treatment due to adverse events. Two-thirds of the notified cases were detected through contact investigation. Increasing numbers of persons with immunosuppressive disorders, elderly persons and foreign-born persons were notified in recent years, due to policy changes and the introduction of the interferon-γ release assay. Children (96%) and the immunosuppressed (95%) were more likely to start preventive treatment. Children (93%) were also more likely to complete preventive treatment, as were persons treated with rifampicin or rifampicin/isoniazid regimens (91% and 92%, respectively). The latter groups were also 40% less likely to stop preventive treatment due to adverse events. Under these operational conditions, the estimated risk reduction on incident TB in the target population for LTBI management is 40–60%. Systematic monitoring and evaluation enables successful management of latent TB infection http://ow.ly/X6D2A