Sex differences in TB burden and notifications in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Abstract
Background
Tuberculosis (TB) case
notification rates are usually higher in men than in women, but
notification data are insufficient to measure sex differences in
disease burden. This review set out to systematically
investigate whether sex ratios in case notifications reflect
differences in disease prevalence and to identify gaps in access
to and/or utilisation of diagnostic services.
Methods and Findings
In accordance
with the published protocol (CRD42015022163), TB prevalence
surveys in nationally representative and sub-national adult
populations (age ≥ 15 y) in low- and middle-income countries
published between 1 January 1993 and 15 March 2016 were
identified through searches of PubMed, Embase, Global Health,
and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews; review of
abstracts; and correspondence with the World Health
Organization. Random-effects meta-analyses examined
male-to-female (M:F) ratios in TB prevalence and
prevalence-to-notification (P:N) ratios for smear-positive TB.
Meta-regression was done to identify factors associated with
higher M:F ratios in prevalence and higher P:N ratios.
Eighty-three publications describing 88 surveys with over 3.1
million participants in 28 countries were identified (36 surveys
in Africa, three in the Americas, four in the Eastern
Mediterranean, 28 in South-East Asia and 17 in the Western
Pacific). Fifty-six surveys reported in 53 publications were
included in quantitative analyses. Overall random-effects
weighted M:F prevalence ratios were 2.21 (95% CI
1.92–2.54; 56 surveys) for bacteriologically positive TB
and 2.51 (95% CI 2.07–3.04; 40 surveys) for smear-positive
TB. M:F prevalence ratios were highest in South-East Asia and in
surveys that did not require self-report of signs/symptoms in
initial screening procedures. The summary random-effects
weighted M:F ratio for P:N ratios was 1.55 (95% CI
1.25–1.91; 34 surveys). We intended to stratify the
analyses by age, HIV status, and rural or urban setting;
however, few studies reported such data.
Conclusions
TB prevalence is
significantly higher among men than women in low- and
middle-income countries, with strong evidence that men are
disadvantaged in seeking and/or accessing TB care in many
settings. Global strategies and national TB programmes should
recognise men as an underserved high-risk group and improve
men’s access to diagnostic and screening services to
reduce the overall burden of TB more effectively and ensure
gender equity in TB care.
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Source:
PLOS Medicine