BUTIMBA: Intensifying the Hunt for Child TB in Swaziland through Household Contact Tracing.

Limited data exists to inform contact tracing guidelines in children and HIV-affected populations. We evaluated the yield and additionality of household contact and source case investigations in Swaziland, a TB/HIV high-burden setting, while prioritizing identification of childhood TB.In partnership...

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Main Authors: Anna Maria Mandalakas, Katherine Ngo, Pilar Alonso Ustero, Rachel Golin, Florence Anabwani, Bulisile Mzileni, Welile Sikhondze, Robert Stevens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5249050?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-7fc5a426f67543279763dc635690072a2020-11-25T00:08:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01121e016976910.1371/journal.pone.0169769BUTIMBA: Intensifying the Hunt for Child TB in Swaziland through Household Contact Tracing.Anna Maria MandalakasKatherine NgoPilar Alonso UsteroRachel GolinFlorence AnabwaniBulisile MzileniWelile SikhondzeRobert StevensLimited data exists to inform contact tracing guidelines in children and HIV-affected populations. We evaluated the yield and additionality of household contact and source case investigations in Swaziland, a TB/HIV high-burden setting, while prioritizing identification of childhood TB.In partnership with 7 local TB clinics, we implemented standardized contact tracing of index cases (IC) receiving TB treatment. Prioritizing child contacts and HIV-affected households, screening officers screened contacts for TB symptoms and to identify risk factors associated with TB. We ascertained factors moderating the yield of contact tracing and measured the impact of our program by additional notifications.From March 2013 to November 2015, 3,258 ICs (54% bacteriologically confirmed; 70% HIV-infected; 85% adults) were enrolled leading to evaluation of 12,175 contacts (median age 18 years, IQR 24-42; 45% children; 9% HIV-infected). Among contacts, 196 TB cases (56% bacteriologically confirmed) were diagnosed resulting in a program yield of 1.6% for all forms of TB. The number needed to screen (NNS) to identify a bacteriologically confirmed TB case or all forms TB case traced from a child IC <5 years was respectively 62% and 40% greater than the NNS for tracing from an adult IC. In year one, we demonstrated a 32% increase in detection of bacteriologically confirmed child TB. Contacts were more likely to have TB if <5 years (OR = 2.0), HIV-infected (OR = 4.9), reporting ≥1 TB symptoms (OR = 7.7), and sharing a bed (OR = 1.7) or home (OR = 1.4) with the IC. There was a 1.4 fold increased chance of detecting a TB case in households known to be HIV-affected.Contact tracing prioritizing children is not only feasible in a TB/HIV high-burden setting but contributes to overall case detection. Our findings support WHO guidelines prioritizing contact tracing among children and HIV-infected populations while highlighting potential to integrate TB and HIV case finding.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5249050?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Maria Mandalakas
Katherine Ngo
Pilar Alonso Ustero
Rachel Golin
Florence Anabwani
Bulisile Mzileni
Welile Sikhondze
Robert Stevens
spellingShingle Anna Maria Mandalakas
Katherine Ngo
Pilar Alonso Ustero
Rachel Golin
Florence Anabwani
Bulisile Mzileni
Welile Sikhondze
Robert Stevens
BUTIMBA: Intensifying the Hunt for Child TB in Swaziland through Household Contact Tracing.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anna Maria Mandalakas
Katherine Ngo
Pilar Alonso Ustero
Rachel Golin
Florence Anabwani
Bulisile Mzileni
Welile Sikhondze
Robert Stevens
author_sort Anna Maria Mandalakas
title BUTIMBA: Intensifying the Hunt for Child TB in Swaziland through Household Contact Tracing.
title_short BUTIMBA: Intensifying the Hunt for Child TB in Swaziland through Household Contact Tracing.
title_full BUTIMBA: Intensifying the Hunt for Child TB in Swaziland through Household Contact Tracing.
title_fullStr BUTIMBA: Intensifying the Hunt for Child TB in Swaziland through Household Contact Tracing.
title_full_unstemmed BUTIMBA: Intensifying the Hunt for Child TB in Swaziland through Household Contact Tracing.
title_sort butimba: intensifying the hunt for child tb in swaziland through household contact tracing.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Limited data exists to inform contact tracing guidelines in children and HIV-affected populations. We evaluated the yield and additionality of household contact and source case investigations in Swaziland, a TB/HIV high-burden setting, while prioritizing identification of childhood TB.In partnership with 7 local TB clinics, we implemented standardized contact tracing of index cases (IC) receiving TB treatment. Prioritizing child contacts and HIV-affected households, screening officers screened contacts for TB symptoms and to identify risk factors associated with TB. We ascertained factors moderating the yield of contact tracing and measured the impact of our program by additional notifications.From March 2013 to November 2015, 3,258 ICs (54% bacteriologically confirmed; 70% HIV-infected; 85% adults) were enrolled leading to evaluation of 12,175 contacts (median age 18 years, IQR 24-42; 45% children; 9% HIV-infected). Among contacts, 196 TB cases (56% bacteriologically confirmed) were diagnosed resulting in a program yield of 1.6% for all forms of TB. The number needed to screen (NNS) to identify a bacteriologically confirmed TB case or all forms TB case traced from a child IC <5 years was respectively 62% and 40% greater than the NNS for tracing from an adult IC. In year one, we demonstrated a 32% increase in detection of bacteriologically confirmed child TB. Contacts were more likely to have TB if <5 years (OR = 2.0), HIV-infected (OR = 4.9), reporting ≥1 TB symptoms (OR = 7.7), and sharing a bed (OR = 1.7) or home (OR = 1.4) with the IC. There was a 1.4 fold increased chance of detecting a TB case in households known to be HIV-affected.Contact tracing prioritizing children is not only feasible in a TB/HIV high-burden setting but contributes to overall case detection. Our findings support WHO guidelines prioritizing contact tracing among children and HIV-infected populations while highlighting potential to integrate TB and HIV case finding.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5249050?pdf=render
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