Risk Factors for Tuberculosis and Effect of Preventive Therapy Among Close Contacts of Persons With Infectious Tuberculosis
Author(s) -
M. R. Reichler,
Awal Khan,
Timothy R. Sterling,
Hui Zhao,
Bin Chen,
Ye Yuan,
Joyce Moran,
James McAuley,
Bonita T. Mangura,
I Bakhtawar,
Catherine Ledoux,
J Beison,
M Fitzgerald,
Monika Naus,
Motohiro Nakajima,
Neil W. Schluger,
Yael HirschMoverman,
Jennifer L. Moran,
Henry M. Blumberg,
J Tapia,
L Singha,
E Hershfeld,
B. Roche,
A Sevilla,
T Chavez-Lindell,
Fernanda Maruri,
Susan E. Dorman,
Wendy Cronin,
Elizabeth Munk,
Abdul Qadir Khan,
B Chen,
F Yan,
Y Shen,
Rose Punnoose,
H Zhang,
Patricia A. Bessler,
M Fagley,
Christina S. Hirsch,
Cheng Luo
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1093/cid/ciz438
Subject(s) - medicine , tuberculosis , contact tracing , latent tuberculosis , index case , active tuberculosis , pediatrics , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , disease , infectious disease (medical specialty) , mycobacterium tuberculosis , immunology , covid-19 , pathology
Background Close contacts of persons with pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) have high rates of TB disease. Methods We prospectively enrolled TB patients and their close contacts at 9 US/Canadian sites. TB patients and contacts were interviewed to identify index patient, contact, and exposure risk factors for TB. Contacts were evaluated for latent TB infection (LTBI) and TB, and the effectiveness of LTBI treatment for preventing contact TB was examined. Results Among 4490 close contacts, multivariable risk factors for TB were age ≤5 years, US/Canadian birth, human immunodeficiency virus infection, skin test induration ≥10 mm, shared bedroom with an index patient, exposure to more than 1 index patient, and index patient weight loss (P < .05 for each). Of 1406 skin test–positive contacts, TB developed in 49 (9.8%) of 446 who did not initiate treatment, 8 (1.8%) of 443 who received partial treatment, and 1 (0.2%) of 517 who completed treatment (1951, 290, and 31 cases/100 000 person-years, respectively; P < .001). TB was diagnosed in 4.2% of US/Canadian-born compared with 2.3% of foreign-born contacts (P = .002), and TB rates for US/Canadian-born and foreign-born contacts who did not initiate treatment were 3592 and 811 per 100 000 person-years, respectively (P < .001). Conclusions Treatment for LTBI was highly effective in preventing TB among close contacts of infectious TB patients. Several index patient, contact, and exposure characteristics associated with increased risk of contact TB were identified. These findings help inform contact investigation, LTBI treatment, and other public health prevention efforts.
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