Abstract
In 1990 a workshop was organised in the village of Wolfheze (the Netherlands), where experts discussed the critical interventions that would foster elimination of TB in Europe. This event has been followed by several more over the following two decades to become known as the “Wolfheze Workshops”. This article provides a brief overview of the history and the impact the Wolfheze Workshops have had on the commitment of European governments to standardise definitions, recording and reporting systems and, thus, permitted comparison of interventions and improving TB control across borders. The Wolfheze Workshops have been and still are an essential platform for this exchange of experiences, promoting common approaches.
During the 1980's, inspired by the declining trends of tuberculosis (TB) since the 1950s, experts from low-incidence countries in Europe started to debate the likelihood of the elimination of TB. In the spring of 1990, a workshop was organised in the village of Wolfheze near Arnhem (the Netherlands), where experts discussed the critical interventions that would foster the elimination of TB in Europe. This initial historical event has been followed by many more over the following two decades and, even if not always taking place in the original setting, they have become known as the “Wolfheze Workshops”. It was the initiative of the then president of the European region of the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (now known as the Union), Prof. E. Tala from Finland and the Director of the (then) Royal Netherlands Tuberculosis Association (KNCV) Dr J.F. Broekmans to convene this meeting of experts.
Originally aiming at low-TB incidence countries in Europe, but also elsewhere, their focus changed after the collapse of the former Soviet Union (FSU). The new independent countries in Eastern Europe were high-TB incidence countries and it soon became apparent that TB elimination in Western Europe was intrinsically linked to the epidemic in Eastern Europe. 20 yrs later it is now time to assess the contributions of the Wolfheze Workshops to improved TB control in Europe. Did they significantly change the roadmap towards elimination in Europe and did they achieve concrete results? This article presents, from an historical perspective, the Wolfheze Workshops and their outcomes, as well as their legacy for future generations to realise the power and the effectiveness of coordinated multi-national approaches to global health problems.
APPROACH AND AIMS
Generally speaking, the Wolfheze Workshops can be divided into three periods, depending on the focus and the needs arising during them: Period 1 (1990–1995), new strategies for low-incidence countries; Period 2 (1996–2005), multifaceted strategies for low-, medium- and high-incidence countries; Period 3 (2006 onwards), separate tracks for low- and high-incidence countries. Originally the workshops were attended by experts within the various fields of TB (clinical, epidemiology, public health and laboratory) representing 15 European and four non-European low-incidence countries, to contribute to debates on the themes identified by the organisers as crucial for elimination. This can be described as the first period. It led to the establishment of EuroTB as a European surveillance centre at the start of Period 2. Putting the focus on TB control and elimination in Europe, the platform changed and thus sought the participation of senior officials of national TB programmes and laboratories in the second period. The different pace of development in low- and high-incidence countries in Europe made it necessary to divide the workshops into two different tracks for the two country groups, but still including national programme managers, laboratory specialists and a range of additional experts from the World Health Organization (WHO), the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases (the Union) and linked institutions. In the third period, the newly established European Centre of Disease Control (ECDC) became involved. The public health answers given by the Wolfheze Workshops to specific problems relevant for TB control and elimination have been analysed, described and summarised in table format for each period.
RESULTS
Period 1: 1990–1995, new strategies for low-incidence countries
The conveners of the first Wolfheze meeting and those who agreed to participate in the workshop held in March 1990 may have held diverse views on what should be the outcome of the workshop, which was reflected in the wide range of topics that were presented. They seemed to agree, however, that the major conclusions from the deliberations should be summarised in a report to serve as a basis for the future direction any possible follow-up workshop would have to take.
The title of this first report obviously suggests the major points that the workshop participants and those charged with writing it up had to make 1. First, addressing TB was a government responsibility and non-governmental organisations had to play a major role in keeping governments alert as the problem was seemingly diminishing. Secondly, the publication of a TB elimination plan for the US 2 clearly left its mark on European low-incidence countries. Finally, Europe was to present its own identity on how it would proceed with controlling TB. Indeed, the resulting report made three points: 1) it delineated the responsibilities of the governments; 2) it specifically called for strengthening surveillance; and 3) it emphasised the need for highly qualified personnel to tackle the problem, calling on rebuilding or strengthening centres of excellence and expertise. The report introduced a common terminology with operational definitions to facilitate the use of a common language.
A follow-up workshop, held in Wolfheze in 1994, established a task force to address the problem of TB associated with international migration in Europe. This task force was comprised of representatives from more than 30 European countries. The workshop report recorded an inventory of activities that were being carried out in different countries to address the recognised high relative risk of TB among immigrants 3. Most responding countries used active case finding with radiography, with some countries supplementing it with tuberculin testing. In some countries, screening was indiscriminate for any foreigner, other countries reported more targeted activities. It appeared from the survey that the criterion was by and large “foreign citizen” rather than selection of groups known to have a high prevalence amongst these. The reliance on radiography alone also indicated the preference given to identify currently prevalent cases without additionally considering prevention of future incident cases through identification of those already infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis that might be benefiting from preventive therapy. The report called for targeted screening of foreigners, taking into consideration differences in the epidemiology of TB in the countries of origin. To refine such knowledge, a call was made for better surveillance and evaluation of the yield resulting from screening policies. In an accompanying editorial, the ethical obligations intrinsically linked to screening populations, and segments of the foreign-born population in particular, were highlighted 4.
Surveillance, the critical foundation of any effective TB control activity was seriously deficient in many European countries 5, 6, while in North America, the US in particular 7, it was taken as the yard stick against which to measure what could and should be achieved in industrialised countries. At the time the second Wolfheze Workshop took place, the AIDS epidemic had risen rapidly, impacting tangibly on TB morbidity in the US since 1985 8. The co-epidemic of multidrug-resistant (MDR)-TB in New York City (NY, USA) 9 made the front page of newspapers and drew the attention of politicians once again to TB. This US experience was widely presented to the participants in the second Wolfheze Workshop. The European AIDS surveillance system, which had achieved a unique collaboration between most European countries on a common data collection, was presented as well. Surveillance was comprehensively addressed and was the key issue of the third publication of the working group established after the second Wolfheze Workshop 10. The recommendations addressed several key issues that needed to be taken into consideration for an effective surveillance system for TB. First, it was essential that a clear and unambiguous case definition based on bacteriological findings had to be adopted by all countries. Secondly, a minimum set of essential variables was more likely to provide relevant information than a vast number of variables that were unlikely to be furnished to a reasonable degree of completeness. Thirdly, experience shows that physicians mandated to report were often not adhering to such legal requirements 11. Thus, it was critical to ensure, in addition to practicing physicians, that laboratories reported each bacteriologically confirmed case of TB. The European Centre for the Epidemiological Monitoring of AIDS (CESES) was the institution of choice to implement the proposed surveillance system recommended by the working group, which had obtained consent from 37 countries of the European Region of the WHO. Technical support was to be provided by the KNCV TB Foundation (previously the Royal Netherland TB Association) and an agreement for financial support by the European Union (EU) (DG SANCO; Directorate General for Health and Consumers) was quickly found. Implementation was swift with a first feasibility report published in 1997 12. Wolfheze Workshop leaders and selected participants were those who constituted the scientific advisory committee of the newly established EuroTB surveillance project based at CESES. Undoubtedly, the Wolfheze “incubator” was behind the major achievement of previously non-existent common standards for surveillance in Europe (table 1).
Period 2: 1996–2005, multifaceted strategies for low-, medium- and high-incidence countries
Standardised case definitions and harmonised data collection for unified European TB surveillance
As a response to the threats posed by TB and other serious communicable diseases, the European Parliament acted to strengthen surveillance in the EU 13, 14. Its decisions enforced member countries to share information on diseases to establish an early warning system. It also provided for a better understanding of the global situation through the pooling of data from a wider knowledge base. In 2002, in an effort to standardise reporting, the European Commission (EC) published standard case definitions for surveillance 15.
The establishment of a legal framework for unified surveillance by the EC was, however, preceded by the Wolfheze Workshops and their consensus documents with recommendations on surveillance 10, treatment outcome monitoring 16, drug resistance surveillance 17 and TB control and elimination 18, 19. As a result, the standard definition for TB bore distinct differences from those of other communicable conditions. A decision to treat patients was a criterion for defining a case, while patients were to be classified by features important to public health; previous treatment history and site of disease.
The use of case-based (individual) data at national level was encouraged. Completeness of reporting was important: information on ≤60% of TB patients was considered likely to be nonrepresentative of the entire TB case load. The number of countries reporting case-based data for European supranational surveillance increased steadily until 2005 (fig. 1). Nevertheless, with the exception of the Baltic States, no FSU country participated up until 2005, although a number of these had national, countrywide datasets and provided aggregate data.
Countries providing case-based data for European surveillance until 2005 by a) level of data completeness and b) case-based reporting by number of countries (blue bars) and tuberculosis cases notified (•), 1995–2005. ▓: none; pale blue: notification only; □: notification + resistance; dark blue: notification + resistance + outcome. #: Poland; outcome data but not resistance.
In a context where migration from countries with high TB incidence to countries with low incidence was expected to continue, it was recommended that European countries strengthen case notification (from clinicians and laboratories), screen for TB among persons of foreign origin, provide appropriate curative and preventive services, and evaluate efficiency and effectiveness of screening procedures 3. The availability of data did improve over the years and allowed more in-depth ascertainment of both the absolute and relative increase of TB cases of foreign origin in many Western European countries up until at least 2005 20.
TB control programmes: a revival in the WHO European region
In the attempt to stimulate high-incidence European countries to adopt its new strategy launched in 1994, branded as DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment, Short-Course) 21 the year after, WHO held the first meeting of the European national TB programme (NTP) managers in June 1994 in Warsaw, Poland. This event was attended by representatives from 25 Central and Eastern European countries. It was a difficult time for the FSU countries in which the public health system had collapsed resulting in frequent stock-outs of medications. At the meeting, participants requested WHO to assist in the implementation of the DOTS strategy. The five-point policy for TB control, known as the DOTS Strategy, is: 1) government commitment; 2) case detection through direct sputum smear examination of suspects; 3) standardised short-course chemotherapy for at least all smear-positive TB cases; 4) regular uninterrupted supply of all essential anti-TB drugs; and 5) a monitoring system for programme supervision and evaluation.
The involvement of WHO and other partners in TB control activities in Eastern Europe accelerated following this landmark meeting. Thereafter, in view of the growing demand for technical support in many countries, WHO decided to hold TB managers meetings every 2 yrs. Subsequent events have been held in Poland (1996), Kyrgyzstan (1998), Finland (2000), the Netherlands (2002) and Romania (2004).
Converging priorities between the 1996 WHO meeting in Poland and the third Wolfheze Workshop, held a few weeks earlier in Noordwijk (the Netherlands), were reflected in an overlapping agenda. At the meeting in Poland, participants from Eastern Europe voiced the same concern and demands for technical cooperation. Thus, it was decided to combine the Wolfheze Workshops every other year with the NTP managers meetings of WHO. During the fifth NTP meeting in 2002, the expansion of the WHO-recommended DOTS strategy in the region was discussed 22. The strategy aimed to achieve the World Health Assembly targets 23. In 2005, the WHO European region Technical Advisory Group recommended that more efforts were needed to reach these targets 24. By 2006, 35 out of 53 countries in the European region (fig. 2) reported that >95% of their populations could access DOTS while many of the remaining countries were implementing some components of the strategy (e.g. monitoring system). Programme performance, however, remained unsatisfactory, with 52% of estimated new sputum smear-positive cases detected in countries implementing the DOTS strategy, achieving only 71% treatment success among these, the lowest performance among any WHO region in the world.
The World Health Organization European Region main country groupings in 2007. The European Union (EU-27) is shown in blue and the West, non-EU in red.
The effectiveness of treatment programmes in curing TB patients, especially the most infectious patients, was an early concern of the European movement. A Wolfheze Task Force recommended that all laboratory-confirmed pulmonary cases notified were, as a minimum, to be assigned to six mutually exclusive treatment outcome categories 16. New and re-treated cases reported during one calendar year would be analysed as two separate “cohorts”. As outcome information would be collected following the initial case notification, this was expected to require the voluntary engagement of the attending doctors in countries. Only Norway had mandatory treatment outcome monitoring in place by 1997 while a few other countries had started to collect these data through their TB control services. In the following years, treatment outcome reporting to the supranational level increased dramatically, even if adoption of the recommended methodology and reporting practices differed between countries 25. Many countries assigned outcomes using case-based data on the entire national datasets, thus providing additional data which were of use for certain analysis (e.g. association between risk of death and age) and also outcome information on non-pulmonary TB patients. 44 countries reported outcomes for ∼119,000 cases notified in 2005. Of these, 38 countries reported outcomes based on exhaustive, nationwide cohorts. The overall reported treatment success in new pulmonary cases in these countries did not reach the 85% target, but varied by location (mean: 79% in the EU and West, 74% in the non-Baltic countries of the FSU and 89% in the Balkans). Major obstacles to achieving the targets were loss due to follow-up, which was high throughout the region, high deaths especially in the EU and other Western European countries and, partly as a result of a high drug-resistant TB burden, frequent failures and loss to follow-up in the FSU.
A drive towards elimination and its obstacles in low-incidence countries
The resurgence of TB in many industrialised European countries, due to varying degrees of migration, HIV, impoverishment and other socio-economic factors, made the prospect of its elimination more distant. While substantial progress has been registered in TB control across Europe, no country has come close to the threshold of one case of active TB per million population as proposed in the framework document. If TB incidence continues to decline at current trends, countries may still be several decades away from elimination.
The 1990 Wolfheze Workshop had concluded, amongst others, that elimination could only be reached if governments maintained a central role in TB care and control, if specialised health personnel were available and if surveillance and monitoring were strengthened 1. By the end of the 1990s, most Western European countries had reduced TB rates among their native populations to very low levels indeed. In contrast, the higher TB rates among certain risk groups in these countries, particularly individuals originating from high-incidence countries, became more prominent. In 2002, a Working Group published a framework for TB control and elimination in low-incidence countries 18. This document expanded upon the principles in the original 1994 WHO framework document, but focused on low incidence European countries 26. It stressed rapid case detection and treatment to reduce avoidable death and the incidence and prevalence of latent infection with M. tuberculosis. The framework document of 2002 put the DOTS strategy as the back bone of TB control in low-incidence countries. Risk-group management, outbreak management and infection control are additional key interventions for countries with a low incidence of TB. The organisers of the Wolfheze Workshops felt that further elaboration of this policy package would favour TB control and elimination in low- and intermediate-incidence countries and should be part of the future agenda.
DRUG RESISTANCE
A WHO report published in 1997 revealed for the first time a major problem related to drug resistance in several Eastern European countries 27. Concerns about the inadequacy of first-line regimens in the face of drug-resistant TB, and especially MDR-TB, were therefore discussed at the NTP meeting in Finland in 2000. It was recommended to introduce programmatic management of cases with MDR-TB only where TB control programmes were functioning well. The need to avert the further emergence of drug-resistant TB was emphasised. In the same year, specific recommendations for the standardisation of TB drug resistance surveillance in Europe were published as a result of another Wolfheze Task Force established at the fourth workshop 17. Laboratories were to use standardised methods for drug susceptibility testing (DST) with a quality-assurance programme. In 1998, 22 out of 47 national reference laboratories participated in an international proficiency testing programme, but only 11 had proficiency testing schemes for their own laboratories. By 2005, 35 out of 45 countries providing DST data reported that they had participated in international proficiency for DST within the previous 4 yrs and 19 countries with two or more laboratories performing DST had national proficiency schemes (fig. 3). Resistance to isoniazid and rifampicin (i.e. MDR) at the start of treatment, calculated separately for patients previously treated with combined anti-TB drugs and for those who had never been treated, was considered one of the main indicators. Analyses by year of report, age, sex, country of birth, site of disease and sputum smear results were recommended. Countries in which routine surveillance was not possible were to undertake periodic representative surveys or initiate sentinel systems. By 2006, 30 countries were reporting countrywide representative data, of which 22 were providing DST results for isoniazid and rifampicin on a case-based level and four others reported data from surveys performed within the previous 5 yrs. Through these improvements in reporting it was possible to describe, in detail, the main characteristics of drug-resistant cases and the main determinants for MDR among pooled cases from several European countries 28.
Country participation in international quality assurance schemes for drug susceptibility testing (isoniazid and rifampicin) by 2005 in the European Region. The number of countries is indicated above the bars. EU: European Union; FSU: former Soviet Union.
Migration
One of the reasons for the stagnation in decline in Western European countries has been immigration from countries with a higher prevalence of TB. Both the number and the proportion of TB cases of foreign origin increased over the years in Western Europe 20. By 2005, 30% of the cases reported in the 25 countries of the EU were of foreign origin. Moreover, drug-resistant TB among cases of foreign origin, especially among those from the FSU countries, is commonly higher than among native cases.
Incarceration
Correctional facilities have often been cited as reservoirs for TB, presenting a potential threat to the general population. Among 22 European countries responding to a survey, the median TB notification rate among inmates was 232 per 100,000 in 2002 29. The overall rate among prisoners was 15 times higher than in the civilian populations of these countries, but was much higher in some. Screening practices and coverage varied markedly between countries. These results highlighted the vulnerability of prisoners to TB.
HIV comorbidity
The overall contribution of HIV to TB epidemiology in Europe has remained relatively small, although HIV may be important among groups such as injection drug users and immigrants from high HIV prevalence countries. With Eastern Europe having the fastest growing HIV epidemic in the world, HIV could become an important obstruction to achieving elimination. After an in-depth discussion at the Wolfheze Workshops in 2001 and 2002, WHO developed a framework to decrease the TB/HIV burden 30, focusing primarily on six countries considered a high priority for both TB and HIV (the three Baltic States, Belarus, the Russian Federation and Ukraine). All of these countries reported having a national policy to screen HIV-positive individuals for TB in 2006 (except Lithuania) and the three non-Baltic countries were offering isoniazid preventive therapy to HIV-positive individuals by 2007 (table 2).
Period 3: 2006 onwards, separate tracks for high- and low-/medium-incidence countries
In 2006, the preparation and launch of the new Stop TB Strategy 31, 32, with a more comprehensive control package than DOTS, and the situation of a rising incidence of TB, especially drug-resistant TB in Eastern European and Central Asian (EECA) countries since the mid-1990s, urged the organising committee to focus more intensely on high-priority countries and on interventions that could strengthen TB control in EECA countries. Therefore, the decision was made to create two interlinked tracks within the Wolfheze Workshops from 2006 onward: one directed towards the high-priority countries and one directed towards low- and medium-incidence countries, in addition to joint sessions.
In 2006 in Vilnius (Lithuania), a joint Wolfheze Workshop and WHO-NTP managers meeting discussed the new Stop TB Strategy 31, the International Standards for Tuberculosis Care 33 and the Patient's Charter 34. Separate tracks for high- and low-/medium-TB burden countries followed. The NTP managers meeting discussed a draft of the “Plan to Stop TB in 18 high-priority countries in the WHO European Region, 2007–2015” 35. These 18 high-priority countries were: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bulgaria, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Republic of Moldova, Romania, Russian Federation, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan.
The Wolfheze Workshop dealt with: 1) contact tracing/outbreak management, leading to creating a writing group for a consensus document on contract tracing 36; 2) interferon-gamma release assay, resulting in a published consensus statement about the use of these assays 37; 3) exploration on the role of nationwide DNA fingerprinting of TB strains; and 4) draft guidelines for TB infection control in high MDR-TB settings. Pending the publication of international TB infection control guidelines, these draft guidelines helped countries (Russia, Belarus and Romania) to finalise their own national infection control guidelines.
In order to increase political commitment, the meeting in 2006 also discussed the planning of a European Ministerial Forum and its declaration. As a result, a WHO European Ministerial Forum took place in Berlin in October 2007. The ministerial delegations that were present committed to adopt the Stop TB Strategy and endeavoured to secure sustainable financing for TB control in all aspects 38.
The joint Wolfheze Workshop and the NTP managers meeting in 2008 followed up on: 1) the Berlin Declaration on TB and how to enhance its use as an advocacy tool 39; 2) implementation of the Plan to Stop TB in 18 high-priority countries in the WHO European region, 2007–2015; 3) the Framework action plan to fight TB in the EU, and its recommendations for implementation and monitoring 40; and 4) the review of the most updated and controversial interventions for TB control and elimination in low TB incidence settings, including a consensus paper on TB contact tracing, TB control in migrants 41, 42, the role of rapid detection techniques for the identification of drug-resistant TB 43, and how country reviews can contribute to the performance of TB control within a country. To monitor TB in internal and external migrants, both in Western and Eastern European countries, ECDC commissioned a literature review, conducted by KNCV, to study the effectiveness of different screening interventions. Three main screening strategies were identified (screening at the port of entry, just after arrival in shelters, or later after arrival in the community) that showed no differences in effectiveness. Undocumented migrants are among the most vulnerable groups with limited access to diagnosis and treatment. Recommendations were presented, including deferring deportation until completion of treatment, which were endorsed in November 2008 in an Official Statement of The Union (table 3).
CONCLUSION
The spirit of the first Wolfheze Workshop, based on an exchange of opinions originating from personal expertise and stimulated by the informal atmosphere of the rural surroundings of Wolfheze, has been maintained over the years, despite the growing number of participants, the necessary change of venues, the ensuing new challenges that European TB control faces and the complexities of global health in recent years. This spirit and the willingness of European TB experts and leaders to work jointly against the common enemy, despite coming from different professional backgrounds and cultures, overcoming longstanding controversies, stimulated the commitment of European governments to standardise their definitions, their recording and reporting systems, and their provision of either aggregated data or individual data to the common European database, initially at EuroTB and now at ECDC. It allowed for a comparison of harmonised interventions and helped to improve TB control across borders, taking advantage of lessons learned. The Wolfheze Workshops have been, and still are, an essential platform for this exchange of experiences, promoting common approaches. The informal and friendly atmosphere of the meetings facilitated sharing experiences and in-depth discussions on common challenges.
The Wolfheze Workshops will continue with two separate, yet interlinked tracks. The Wolfheze programme committee will be expanded to ensure better representation of both high TB priority and low-/middle-incidence countries.
The Steering Committee of the WHO European Ministerial Forum “All Against TB” under auspices of the WHO Regional Office for Europe can create a potential link to the Wolfheze Workshops, thus using the movement to reiterate the countries commitments to the Berlin Declaration. In order to avoid an overlap between the Wolfheze Workshops and the Union's European congresses and to capitalise on available resources, the pan-European Wolfheze Workshops will be organised every other year from 2008 onward. When feasible, these workshops will be conducted back-to-back with the WHO-NTP managers meeting and the ECDC Focal Points meeting. The movement will serve as a “think tank” to discuss modern policies and practices of TB control in Europe. The year 2010 marks the 20th anniversary of the first workshop, and we look back with respect to the people who inspired this fundamental initiative and to those who contributed, often with passion and intensity, to the debates. The outcomes are in front of our eyes and we can claim today that European efforts are coordinated and harmoni,ed like never before in the history of TB control. This is the best recipe for further progress towards elimination, a word that was the key to reunite all those who cared about TB control in 1990 and that remains the key for the future generations of those who will continue the global fight until the last case of TB is cured.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank M. Grzemska (Stop TB Dept, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland) for her valuable input to the second period described in the manuscript.
Footnotes
Previous articles in this series: No. 1: Erkens CGM, Kamphorst M, Abubakar I, et al. TB contact investigation in low prevalence countries: a European consensus. Eur Respir J 2010; 36: 925–949. No. 2: Solovic I, Sester M, Gomez-Reino JJ, et al. The risk of TB related to tumour necrosis factor antagonist therapies: a TBNET consensus statement. Eur Respir J 2010; 36: 1185–1206. No. 3: Schutz C, Meintjes G, Almajid F, et al. Clinical management of TB and HIV-1 co-infection. Eur Respir J 2010; 36: 1460–1481. No. 4: Yew WW, Lange C, Leung CC. Treatment of TB: update 2010. Eur Respir J 2011; 37: 441–462. No. 5: Leung CC, Rieder HL, Lange C, et al. Treatment of latent infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis: update 2010. Eur Respir J 2011; 37: 690–711.
Statement of Interest
None declared.
- Received February 4, 2010.
- Accepted May 17, 2010.
- ©ERS 2011