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THE POWER OF PUBLICPRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS IN EARLY INFANT DIAGNOSIS

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Title: THE POWER OF PUBLICPRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS IN EARLY INFANT DIAGNOSIS


1
THE POWER OF PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS IN EARLY
INFANT DIAGNOSIS
Roche Molecular Diagnostic Symposium August 2008
2
Agenda
  • Introduction to Clinton Foundation
  • Case study Implementing Early Infant Diagnosis
  • Outcomes

3
Background Clinton Foundation Mission
The Clinton Foundation works to strengthen the
capacity of people in the United States and
throughout the world to meet the challenges of
global interdependence.
  • The mission is pursued through programs and
    partnerships in a variety of areas.
  • The Clinton HIV/AIDS Initiative (CHAI) is the
    oldest and largest of the Foundations many
    programs and has been the template for several
    other programs.

4
Background CHAI Mission and Objectives
To bring high-quality care and treatment to
people living with HIV/AIDS, and to improve
healthcare systems in resource-poor countries.
Mission
  • To be effective, programs must
  • combine prevention, care, and treatment
  • be integrated into public health infrastructure
  • have strong in-country political and policy
    support
  • be viewed as urgent, not as business as usual

Philosophy
  • Ability to mobilize political will (donor and
    host governments)
  • Combine business and clinical expertise in
    operational planning and ongoing implementation
    support
  • Change economics of care and treatment

Unique Value-Add
To accelerate patient enrollment and to improve
the quality and continuity of HIV/AIDS care and
treatment in resource-poor settings.
Goals
5
Overview How CHAI Works
  • At the invitation of local governments, CHAI
    supports developing countries to reach their
    HIV/AIDS care and treatment targets by
  • Facilitating access to affordable drugs and
    diagnostics and
  • Providing technical assistance that combines
    distinctive business/analytics competency with
    clinical expertise.
  • CHAI pursues its mission through three strategic
    program areas
  • Applying business principles to lower the cost
    of, and increase access to, essential drugs and
    diagnostics
  • Partnering with governments to address
    bottlenecks in healthcare systems and
  • Pioneering models to catalyze access for
    hard-to-reach populations.

1
2
3
6
How CHAI Works (2)
7
CHAI has been working for 6 years to help
governments make best use of available resources,
to save as many lives as possible
8
CHAI has supported treatment scale-up through its
work with 18 manufacturers and more than 65
countries
22 partner countries 25 of people on treatment
in developing countries 69 total consortium
countries 90 of people on treatment
9
CHAI Laboratory Services
1. Diagnostic Test Agreements
  • Initially CHAI focused on reducing the cost of
    care and treatment, as it was identified as one
    of the primary barriers to access
  • As a result, CHAI negotiated with suppliers to
    bring down cost of ARVs and diagnostics
  • Diagnostic test agreements to date include CD4,
    viral load, DNA PCR and rapid tests

2. Laboratory Technical Assistance (TA)
  • Despite available funds and better market prices,
    there are still barriers to scaling-up care and
    treatment
  • Many partners are providing site-level support,
    but few are working closely with governments to
    build management capacity
  • CHAI priority is to fill gaps, which often fall
    in the area of operational planning and
    implementation, systems development and program
    management
  • CHAI aims to remain strategic in TA offering,
    building capacity within national systems

10
What are the needs beyond the tests?
  • Scale-up of ARVs has meant significant and
    growing demand for testing services
  • Laboratory needs often not considered until after
    ARVs arrive
  • Little/no experience with specialized testing
    (CD4/VL/DNA PCR)
  • Labs often require basic equipment and
    infrastructure upgrades
  • Laboratory management systems at central level
    underdeveloped
  • Lack of coordination among individual labs,
    donors, technical assistance partners, government
  • Many partners providing site-level support, but
    few are working closely with governments to build
    management capacity

Testing networks that are high-cost and
unreliable, which can limit a countrys ability
to take advantage of lower cost diagnostics.
11
In other words, SYSTEMS development is needed for
laboratories
GOAL
Quick, reliable, high quality, cost-effective,
scalable and uniformly accessible/equitable
testing services that meet the needs of medical
services diagnostics, surveillance and regulatory
requirements
Requires TA in areas including Management and
Planning Human Resources Procurement and Supply
Chain Management Laboratory Networks Laboratory
Infrastructure Training Quality Management
12
Agenda
  • Introduction to Clinton Foundation
  • Case study Implementing Early Infant Diagnosis
  • Outcomes

13
Case Study Implementation of DNA PCR Testing
  • In 2007, CHAI was named the implementing partner
    for a pediatric initiative funded by UNITAID.
  • The UNITAID pediatric initiative covers more than
    30 countries in the developing world.
  • As part of the initiative, CHAI partnered with
    Roche Diagnostics to provide a comprehensive
    package of products for the diagnosis of HIV in
    infants lt18 months of age.
  • However, establishing early infant diagnostic
    (EID) capacity in resource-poor settings faces
    certain barriers.

14
Case Study Implementation of DNA PCR Testing
  • What are the barriers to establishing EID?
  • Requires additional infrastructure or equipment
  • Reagents are expensive
  • Infant diagnosis methods are technologically
    complex
  • To support testing, it is necessary to procure
    multiple supplies from many sources
  • Follow-up through pediatric care and treatment is
    not widely available
  • There is frequently a lack of infant testing
    policies and national infant diagnosis algorithms
  • There is frequently a lack of sample referral
    systems

15
CHAIs Approach to EID
  • As a result of these barriers, CHAI tried to take
    a comprehensive approach to supporting EID by
  • Working upstream and collaborating with suppliers
    to look at procurement challenges and identify
    novel solutions find a turn-key solution
  • Taking a holistic approach to programmatic
    implementation to assist governments in meeting
    demand for the service
  • Signing MOUs with governments and work at the
    national level to develop public systems and
  • Filling gaps and collaborate with partners to the
    greatest extent possible.

16
CHAIs Approach to EID
  • Initially, CHAI worked with Roche Diagnostics to
    reach an agreement on improved pricing for DNA
    PCR test reagents.
  • Then, CHAI and Roche worked together to create a
    turn-key solution to provide all additional
    products needed for DNA PCR testing
  • Dried Blood Spot (DBS) collection devices
  • General laboratory consumables
  • Instruments
  • The result was the design and delivery of various
    bundles of commodities for EID.

17
DNA PCR Laboratory Instrument Bundles
  • Creation of Laboratory Instrument Bundles
  • Establishing and maintaining a DNA PCR laboratory
    typically requires the procurement of equipment
    and supplies from multiple manufacturers.
  • CHAI worked with Roche South Africa to develop
    product bundles that simplify this process
  • Roche assisted with provision of
    service/maintenance.
  • Quantity and quality of supplies in each bundle
    is based on experience and validated by
    specialists, including those at CHAI and Roche.
  • Roche has the responsibility of setting up the
    laboratories (turn-key solution)
  • Three laboratory bundle options, depending on
    degree of automation

18
Collection Supply Bundles for DNA PCR
DBS and Whole Blood Collection Bundles All
products required for sample collection are
bundled into a small box, simplifying procurement
and reducing supply chain risks
  • Bundles available for DBS and whole blood
    collection
  • Specifications and ratios determined through
    collaboration with Ministries of Health,
    clinicians, partner organizations, and Roche
  • High- and Low-Prevalence Bundles available

19
DNA PCR Laboratory Supplies
Laboratory Consumable Bundles Complete testing
supplies bundled together for similar convenience
at the laboratory
Laboratory Reagents CHAI has worked closely with
governments and suppliers to provide the
necessary reagents
  • CHAI will support the assay of the countrys
    choice, so long as it complies with international
    standards
  • Over 90 of countries are using the Roche
    qualitative HIV DNA PCR Assay
  • CHAI has negotiated price reductions, varying by
    country from 30-50

20
Programmatic Support for EID
CHAI recognized that price reductions and a
turn-key solution to commodities for EID were not
sufficient alone to accelerate the implementation
of this much needed technology.
Therefore, CHAI took a comprehensive approach to
programmatic implementation of EID to assist
governments in meeting the demand for service. In
collaboration with other in-country partners,
e.g., the U.S. CDC, Baylor University, ICAP,
UNICEF and others, this work has included a range
of technical assistance.
21
Main Programmatic Areas Addressed When
Establishing Early Infant Diagnosis
Strategy and Planning
  • Policy decisions such as service entry points and
    referral
  • Establishment of early infant diagnosis algorithm
  • Timeline for implementation and rollout

Laboratory Setup
  • Infrastructure
  • Equipment and Supplies
  • Human Resources
  • Quality Control

Training
  • Training participants
  • Trainers
  • Content
  • Training rollout strategy and timeline

Sample Referral Network
  • Transport routes between clinic and testing labs
  • Transport modes (e.g. courier, facility vehicle,
    public transport)
  • Data management, including return of results

Procurement and Supply Chain Management
  • List of products to procure
  • Forecasting
  • Ordering and inventory management

22
Guidelines, Training Partnerships, and Laboratory
Support
  • Guideline and Policy Support
  • Lesotho CHAI assisted to write guidelines for
    early infant diagnosis
  • Tanzania Seconded staff, supported and
    coordinated meetings
  • Laboratory Technician Secondment and Training
  • Zimbabwe CHAI seconded technicians, Roche to
    deliver training
  • Mozambique CHAI seconded technicians, Roche
    delivered training
  • China CHAI seconded technicians, Roche delivered
    training
  • Coordination of Sample Collection Trainings /
    Logistical and Programmatic Support
  • Lesotho collaboration with Ministry of Health,
    CDC, Baylor and NICD
  • Swaziland collaboration with Ministry of Health,
    ICAP, Baylor, and UNICEF
  • Kenya CHAI supports logistics, CDC and partners
    deliver the training
  • Mozambique CHAI providing logistical support and
    funding
  • China support for the central lab to conduct
    trainings at 14 provincial CDC labs around the
    country
  • Delivery of Sample Collection Training
  • Tanzania TOT in Mtwara and Lindi
  • Caribbean Sample collection training for several
    islands
  • India Several thousand health care workers
    trained

23
Sample Transportation
Design and implementation of sample
transportation networks fit into the broader
framework of a countrys laboratory referral
system. CHAI has supported this process in
several ways
  • Assess existing sample transport networks
  • Determine routes, segments, mechanisms
  • Courier negotiations
  • Programmatic support
  • Monitor and track service providers
  • Forecast volumes from collection sites
  • Map against capacity at reference laboratories
  • Analyze the impact of different sample
    transportation scenarios
  • Examples of country work include
  • Cameroon
  • Dominican Republic
  • Kenya
  • Mali
  • Mozambique
  • Tanzania
  • Uganda
  • Zimbabwe

24
Sample Referral Systems Data Management
  • Country Example

25
Agenda
  • Introduction to Clinton Foundation
  • Case study Implementing Early Infant Diagnosis
  • Outcomes

26
Outcomes of EID Intervention
Overall, the results of the collective work on
EID under the pediatric initiative have been
significant Approximately 100,000 DNA PCR tests
were conducted in 2007 across resource-poor
settings, excluding RSA, and that number doubles
if RSA is included. DBS infant blood samples were
collected at approximately 1,400 sites in 2007
across major countries. Excluding RSA, it is
expected that approximately 185,000 to 200,000
DNA PCR tests will be conducted in 2008 with
blood collected from approximately 2,000 or more
sites.

27
Challenges Remain
Despite the overall success of EID over the last
year, challenges remain. These include Continuing
to build on the momentum of 2007 Improving loss
to follow-up following diagnosis, which has a
number of dimensions One focus in this regard
will be improving turnaround time from blood
collection at community sites to return of test
results to the patient.

28
Example - Kenya DNA PCR Network
Packaging
1 day
4 days (shipping done once a week)
Sample Collection
2 Week turnaround to receipt of results
ART/PMTCT centre
Securicor Samples
Testing lab
1 day
1 day
5 days (lab testing)
CDC/KEMRI-Kisumu CDC/KEMRI-Nairobi KEMRI-Kilifi KE
MRI/WRP-Kericho
SecuricorResults
29
The pediatric program, in partnership with
UNITAID and other partners, doubled the number of
children on treatment in 33 countries in 2007
Available resources
60m
35m
3m
Price of peds ARVs
567
196
60
Infant diagnosis sites
1,400
lt200
30

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