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Feasibility of Identifying Household Contacts of Rifampin-and Multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis Cases at High Risk of Progression to Tuberculosis Disease

Authors :
Xingye Wu
Francesca Conradie
Betsy Smith
Mark Harrington
Umesh G. Lalloo
Rodney Dawson
Linda Naini
Michael Hughes
Lynne Jones
Aida Asmelash
N. Sarita Shah
Susan Swindells
Anthony J. Garcia-Prats
Anneke C. Hesseling
Amita Gupta
Kyla Comins
Alberto Mendoza
Soyeon Kim
Jorge Sanchez
Justin Shenje
Nagalingeswaran Kumarasamy
Ana Cristina Garcia Ferreira
Christopher Mugah
Supalert Nedsuwan
Gavin J. Churchyard
Vidya Mave
Pedro Gonzales
Samyra R. Cox
Sandy Nerette Fontain
Lerato Mohapi
Source :
Clin Infect Dis
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2019.

Abstract

Background We assessed multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) cases and their household contacts (HHCs) to inform the development of an interventional clinical trial. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional study of adult MDR-TB cases and their HHCs in 8 countries with high TB burdens. HHCs underwent symptom screenings, chest radiographies, sputum TB bacteriologies, TB infection (TBI) testing (tuberculin skin test [TST] and interferon gamma release assay [IGRA]), and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing. Results From October 2015 to April 2016, 1016 HHCs from 284 MDR-TB cases were enrolled. At diagnosis, 69% of MDR-TB cases were positive for acid-fast bacilli sputum smears and 43% had cavitary disease; at study entry, 35% remained smear positive after a median MDR-TB treatment duration of 8.8 weeks. There were 9 HHCs that were diagnosed with TB prior to entry and excluded. Of the remaining 1007 HHCs, 41% were male and the median age was 25 years. There were 121 (12%) HHCs that had new cases of TB identified: 17 (2%) were confirmed, 33 (3%) probable, and 71 (7%) possible TB cases. The TBI prevalence (defined as either TST or IGRA positivity) was 72% and varied by age, test used, and country. Of 1007 HHCs, 775 (77%) were considered high-risk per these mutually exclusive groups: 102 (10%) were aged Conclusions The majority of HHCs in these high-burden countries were at high risk of TB disease and infection, yet few were receiving routine preventive therapy. Trials of novel, preventive therapies are urgently needed to inform treatment policy and practice.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clin Infect Dis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dd2c00383d7aa847c528d489ff19aeeb