First Progress Report of the Global Plan to End TB 2016–2020
The Progress Report shows need for huge efforts and scale-up to reach 90-(90)-90 TB targets.
10 October 2017 – Guadalajara, Mexico – There is an urgent need for world leaders, heads of states and governments, ministers of health and finance and entire community at large to take note of the the huge level of effort required by each TB programme if we want to rach the Global Plan to end TB targets and, further, if we want to End TB.
This is clearly outlined in the
first 90-(90)-90 progress report of the Global Plan to End TB
2016 – 2020
which establishes the baseline versus each all work and
achievements will be measured to ensure optimal coverage along
the pathway of the cascade of care for TB treatment needed in
order to move towards ending TB. It emphasizes how TB continues
to exist as an epidemic, resulting in a social, economic and
humanitarian crisis that needs to be addressed. The report was
launched on the margins of the 48th Union World
Conference on Lung Health, happening this week in Guadalajara,
Mexico.
“We aim to have this report reaching the offices, the
minds and hearts of Heads of States and Governments. For too
long, TB was discussed just within the medical and technical
circles - which is great, but not enough. Ending TB goes
beyond medical interventions and is first and foremost the
business of countries leaders, if we are honest and if we agree
to be held accountable on our promises to end TB. The report
shows that we must be strategic, focused, ambitious and brave in
the next 3 years to show that we can reach our targets and I
know we can do it””, said Dr Suvanand Sahu,
the Deputy Executive Director of the Stop TB Partnership.
Welcoming the report, Dr Paula Fujiwara, the Union's Scientific
Director said, "This is the first following report to the Global
Plan to End TB, and it brings a necessary and sobering message
-- that we have a long way to go! But it also gives us an
important opportunity to do better, to push the envelope to join
hands to end TB."
Reaching 90% of people affected by TB
There remains a huge gap between the estimated number of people
who become ill with TB and drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) and the
number of people who are diagnosed, put on treatment and
notified. None of the high TB or DR-TB burden countries have
achieved 90% treatment coverage for first-line or second-line TB
treatment. At a time when the world is uniting to combat
antimicrobial resistance (AMR), nearly 4 out of 5 people with
DR-TB remain undiagnosed, and 9 out of 10 people are not being
treated successfully. And, despite TB being one of the major
causes of mortality among women worldwide, only 56% of women
developing TB in 2015 were diagnosed and put on treatment. Using
the 90-(90)-90 targets to assess the global cascade of care
shows that for people with TB the biggest gap is in diagnosis
and putting them on treatment, while for people with DR-TB the
greatest gaps are in both diagnosis and successful treatment
completion.
The report also show states that there is no laboratory data
available on the number of people tested for TB at the global
level, and in many countries this information is not captured at
the national level. Without data on numbers screened, tested and
diagnosed, it is not possible to adequately address the gaps
along the pathway of care related to diagnosis and initiation of
treatment.
Reaching 90% of key populations
The report found that TB data on key populations is limited, and
lacking a standardized approach to collection, collation,
analysis and programmatic use across countries. At the global
level, national TB data is routinely reported for only one key
population group – people living with HIV (PLHIV). In
2015, only 33% of the estimated 1.2 million people who developed
TB and were co-infected with HIV were started on both TB
treatment and antiretroviral therapy (ARV). At the regional
level, data is available for prison inmates in the European and
Central Asian region, and for mining-affected communities in the
Southern African region. At the national level, data on key
population groups are variable and lack uniformity of
approach.
"As the civil society, this report is a big advocacy tool and
good assessment of the work done. We are supportive of this
report and we want to see not just 90-(90)-90, but 100-100-100.
Mentioning key populations several times in the report is a huge
step forward, especially the second (90) target about reaching
90% of key populations. However, we want to see countries
reporting on all other key populations, and not just for PLHIV,"
said Mr Austin Obiefuna, Executive Director of Afro Global
Alliance and board member of the Stop TB Partnership.
Achieving 90% TB treatment success
Globally, first-line TB treatment success is 83%. Eight high TB burden countries have reached 90% first-line treatment success. The very low second-line treatment success rate of 50% is a major concern. None of the high DR-TB burden countries have reached 90% in second-line treatment success. No global data is available on the successful completion of preventive treatment, and the data on TB treatment outcomes disaggregated by age and sex are not being reported at the national or global level.
The 90-(90)-90 targets are the first step to holding people
accountable. These measures will help direct the effort and
investment necessary to save lives for people living with TB,"
said Ambassador Eric Goosby, United Nations Special Envoy for
TB.
This first Progress Report is one in a series that will be
developed over the coming months. The other reports in the
series include Financing TB, The Paradigm Shift and Tuberculosis
Research Funding by the Treatment Action Group (TAG).
Source:
Stop TB Partnership