1. Risk of infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis in travellers to areas of high tuberculosis endemicity.
- Author
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Cobelens, Frank G J, van Deutekom, Henk, Draayer-Jansen, Inez W E, Schepp-Beelen, Ank C H M, van Gerven, Paul J H J, van Kessel, Rob P M, and Mensen, Marlies E A
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TUBERCULOSIS risk factors , *MYCOBACTERIAL diseases , *TUBERCULIN test , *TRAVEL hygiene , *PREVENTION - Abstract
SummaryBackground: No data exist on risks of infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis in travellers. We studied incidences of and risk factors for tuberculin skin-test conversion among Dutch long-term travellers to countries of high tuberculosis endemicity.Methods: In a multicentre, prospective cohort study based in travel and tuberculosis clinics in the Netherlands, 1072 BCG-naïve immunocompetent travellers to countries with an estimated annual risk of M tuberculosis infection of at least 1% were skin tested before departure with 1 tuberculin unit purified protein derivative (PPD) of M tuberculosis in Tween-80. Those with results less than 2 mm were retested 2-4 months after their return with simultaneous testing for cross-sensitivity to environmental mycobacteria (1 tuberculin unit PPD of M scrofulaceum in Tween-80). M tuberculosis infection was defined as a post-travel M tuberculosis tuberculin skin-test result of at least 10 mm that was 3 mm or more larger than the M scrofulaceum result.Findings: Post-travel skin-test results were available for 656 (66%) of 988 individuals who were eligible for follow-up. Among these, 12 M tuberculosis infections were identified (1.8%). The overall incidence rate was 3.5 per 1000 person-months of travel (95% CI 2.0-6.2), and 2.8 per 1000 person-months of travel (1.2-5.5) after exclusion of health-care workers. Two had active tuberculosis at the time of testing (incidence rate 0.6 per 1000 person-months of travel [0.3-2.3]). Work in patient care abroad was an independent risk factor (adjusted rate ratio 5.34, p=0.015).Interpretation: The risk of M tuberculosis infection in long-term travellers to high-endemicity countries, even if not engaged in health-care work, is substantial and of similar magnitude to the average risk for the local population. BCG vaccination or post-travel tuberculin skin-testing of high-risk travellers should be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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