PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - J Mears AU - E Vynnycky AU - J Lord AU - M W Borgdorff AU - T Cohen AU - D Crisp AU - J A Innes AU - M Lilley AU - H Maguire AU - T D McHugh AU - G Woltmann AU - I Abubakar AU - P Sonnenberg TI - The prospective evaluation of the TB strain typing service in England: a mixed methods study AID - 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2014-206480 DP - 2016 Aug 01 TA - Thorax PG - 734--741 VI - 71 IP - 8 4099 - http://thorax.bmj.com/content/71/8/734.short 4100 - http://thorax.bmj.com/content/71/8/734.full SO - Thorax2016 Aug 01; 71 AB - Background In response to rising TB notification rates in England, universal strain typing was introduced in 2010. We evaluated the acceptability, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the TB strain typing service (TB-STS).Methods We conducted a mixed-methods evaluation using routine laboratory, clinic and public health data. We estimated the effect of the TB-STS on detection of false positive Mycobacterium tuberculosis diagnoses (2010–2012); contact tracing yield (number of infections or active disease per pulmonary TB case); and diagnostic delay. We developed a deterministic age-structured compartmental model to explore the effectiveness of the TB-STS, which informed a cost-effectiveness analysis.Results Semi-structured interviews explored user experience. Strain typing identified 17 additional false positive diagnoses. The TB-STS had no significant effect on contact tracing yield or diagnostic delay. Mathematical modelling suggested increasing the proportion of infections detected would have little value in reducing TB incidence in the white UK-born population. However, in the non-white UK-born and non-UK-born populations, over 20 years, if detection of latent infection increases from 3% to 13% per year, then TB incidence would decrease by 11%; reducing diagnostic delay by one week could lead to 25% reduction in incidence. The current TB-STS was not predicted to be cost-effective over 20 years (£95 628/quality-adjusted life-years). Interviews found people had mixed experiences, but identified broader benefits, of the TB-STS.Conclusions To reduce costs, improve efficiency and increase effectiveness, we recommend changes to the TB-STS, including discontinuing routine cluster investigations and focusing on reducing diagnostic delay across the TB programme. This evaluation of a complex intervention informs the future of strain typing in the era of rapidly advancing technologies.