Abstract

BackgroundEffective case identification strategies are fundamental to capturing the remaining visceral leishmaniasis (VL) cases in India. To inform government strategies to reach and sustain elimination benchmarks, this study presents costs of active- and passive- case detection (ACD and PCD) strategies used in India’s most VL-endemic state, Bihar, with a focus on programme outcomes stratified by district-level incidence.MethodsExpenditure analysis was complemented by onsite micro-costing to compare the cost of PCD in hospitals alongside index case-based ACD and a combination of blanket (house-to-house) and camp ACD from January to December 2018. From the provider’s perspective, a cost analysis evaluated the overall programme cost of each activity, the cost per case detected, and the cost of scaling up ACD.ResultsDuring 2018, index case-based ACD, blanket and camp ACD, and PCD reported 1,497, 131, and 1,983 VL-positive cases at a unit cost of $522.81, $4,186.81, and $246.79, respectively. In high endemic districts, more VL cases were identified through PCD while in meso- and low-endemic districts more cases were identified through ACD. The cost of scaling up ACD to identify 3,000 additional cases ranged from $1.6–4 million, depending on the extent to which blanket and camp ACD was relied upon.ConclusionCost per VL test conducted (rather than VL-positive case identified) may be a better metric estimating unit costs to scale up ACD in Bihar. As more VL cases were identified in meso-and low-endemic districts through ACD than PCD, health authorities in India should consider bolstering ACD in these areas. Blanket and camp ACD identified fewer cases at a higher unit cost than index case-based ACD. However, the value of detecting additional VL cases early outweighs long-term costs for reaching and sustaining VL elimination benchmarks in India.

Highlights

  • The Kala-Azar elimination programme (KEP)Visceral leishmaniasis is a parasitic Neglected Tropical Disease (NTD) endemic in 83 countries worldwide, with reported global incidence just over 17,000 in 2018 [1]

  • More visceral leishmaniasis (VL) cases were identified through Passive Case Detection (PCD) while in mesoand low-endemic districts more cases were identified through active case detection (ACD)

  • As more VL cases were identified in mesoand low-endemic districts through ACD than PCD, health authorities in India should consider bolstering ACD in these areas

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Summary

Introduction

Visceral leishmaniasis ( known as Kala-Azar) is a parasitic Neglected Tropical Disease (NTD) endemic in 83 countries worldwide, with reported global incidence just over 17,000 in 2018 [1]. Due to elusive transmission dynamics confounded by asymptomatic carriers and the sequela post-Kala-Azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL), VL is currently targeted for elimination as a public health problem (EPHP), signifying sustained control activities are essential for reaching and maintaining incidence targets to prevent disease resurgence [4]. In 2005, a regional Kala-Azar Elimination Programme (KEP) developed within the ISC to mobilise national programming, international financial support, and drug donations; this has helped facilitate Nepal and Bangladesh achieve EPHP benchmarks [5]. To inform government strategies to reach and sustain elimination benchmarks, this study presents costs of active- and passive- case detection (ACD and PCD) strategies used in India’s most VL-endemic state, Bihar, with a focus on programme outcomes stratified by district-level incidence.

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