Undiagnosed tuberculosis in a community with high HIV prevalence: implications for tuberculosis control

Robin Wood, Keren Middelkoop, Landon Myer, Alison D Grant, Andrew Whitelaw, Stephen D Lawn, Gilla Kaplan, Robin Huebner, James McIntyre, Linda-Gail Bekker, Robin Wood, Keren Middelkoop, Landon Myer, Alison D Grant, Andrew Whitelaw, Stephen D Lawn, Gilla Kaplan, Robin Huebner, James McIntyre, Linda-Gail Bekker

Abstract

Background: Although failure of tuberculosis (TB) control in sub-Saharan Africa is attributed to the HIV epidemic, it is unclear why the directly observed therapy short-course (DOTS) strategy is insufficient in this setting. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of pulmonary TB (PTB) and HIV infection in a community of 13,000 with high HIV prevalence and high TB notification rate and a well-functioning DOTS TB control program.

Methods: Active case finding for PTB was performed in 762 adults using sputum microscopy and Mycobacterium tuberculosis culture, testing for HIV, and a symptom and risk factor questionnaire. Survey findings were correlated with notification data extracted from the TB treatment register.

Results: Of those surveyed, 174 (23%) tested HIV positive, 11 (7 HIV positive) were receiving TB therapy, 6 (5 HIV positive) had previously undiagnosed smear-positive PTB, and 6 (4 HIV positive) had smear-negative/culture-positive PTB. Symptoms were not a useful screen for PTB. Among HIV-positive and -negative individuals, prevalence of notified smear-positive PTB was 1,563/100,000 and 352/100,000, undiagnosed smear-positive PTB prevalence was 2,837/100,000 and 175/100,000, and case-finding proportions were 37 and 67%, respectively. Estimated duration of infectiousness was similar for HIV-positive and HIV-negative individuals. However, 87% of total person-years of undiagnosed smear-positive TB in the community were among HIV-infected individuals.

Conclusions: PTB was identified in 9% of HIV-infected individuals, with 5% being previously undiagnosed. Lack of symptoms suggestive of PTB may contribute to low case-finding rates. DOTS strategy based on passive case finding should be supplemented by active case finding targeting HIV-infected individuals.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Community burden of undiagnosed pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) by HIV and smear status. The closed diamonds (HIV +ve) and open diamonds (HIV −ve) indicate the estimated number of person-years, and the horizontal lines the 95% confidence intervals around these estimates. Estimated time before diagnosis is adjusted for increased mortality (13/100 patient-years) for HIV-positive individuals.

Source: PubMed

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