Impact of mass-screening on TB incidence in a prospective cohort of Brazilian prisoners
Abstract
Background
Globally, prison inmates
are a high-risk population for tuberculosis (TB), but the
specific drivers of disease and impact of mass screening
interventions are poorly understood.
Methods
We performed a prospective
cohort study to characterize the incidence and risk factors for
tuberculosis infection and disease in 12 Brazilian prisons, and
to investigate the effect of mass screening on subsequent
disease risk. After recruiting a stratified random sample of
inmates, we administered a questionnaire to ascertain symptoms
and potential risk factors for tuberculosis; performed
tuberculin skin testing (TST); collected sera for HIV testing;
and obtained two sputum samples for smear microscopy and
culture, from participants reporting a cough of any duration. We
repeated the questionnaire and all tests for inmates who
remained incarcerated after 1 year. TST conversion was defined
as TST ≥10 mm and an induration increase of at least 6 mm in
an individual with a baseline TST <10 mm. Cox proportional
hazard models were performed to identify risk factors associated
with active TB. To evaluate the impact of screening on
subsequent risk of disease, we compared TB notifications over
one year among individuals randomized to screening for active TB
with those not randomized to screening.
Results
Among 3,771 inmates
recruited, 3,380 (89.6 %) were enrolled in the study, and 1,422
remained incarcerated after one year. Among 1,350 inmates (94.9
%) with paired TSTs at baseline and one-year follow-up, 25.7 %
(272/1060) converted to positive. Among those incarcerated for
the year, 10 (0.7 %) had TB at baseline and 25 (1.8 %) were
diagnosed with TB over the subsequent year. Cases identified
through active screening were less likely to be
smearpositive than passively detected cases (10.0 % vs 50.9
%; p < 0.01), suggesting early case detection.
However, there was no reduction in subsequent disease among
individuals actively screened versus those not screened (1.3 %
vs 1.7 %; p = 0.88). Drug use during the year (AHR
3.22; 95 % CI 1.05–9.89) and knows somebody with TB were
(AHR 2.86; 95 % CI 1.01–8.10) associated with active TB
during one year of follow up
Conclusions
Mass screening in twelve
Brazilian prisons did not reduce risk of subsequent disease in
twelve Brazilian prisons, likely due to an extremely high force
of infection. New approaches are needed to control TB in this
high-transmission setting.
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Source: BMC Infectious Diseases