5 research outputs found

    Tuberculosis transmission patterns in a high-incidence area: A spatial analysis

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    SETTING: In the Cape Town suburbs of Ravensmead and Uitsig, tuberculosis has reached epidemic levels, with notifications of 1340/100 000 in 1996. These suburbs are characterised by overcrowding, high unemployment and poverty. It is traditionally believed that tuberculosis transmission takes place mainly in households after close contact with an infectious person. Studies have recently linked tuberculosis transmission to locations outside the household, and have associated these places with a particular high-risk lifestyle. Anthropological studies in some suburbs of Cape Town, in which a very high number of local drinking places (shebeens) were identified (17 per km2), have suggested that social drinking is part of such a lifestyle. OBJECTIVE: To investigate various risk factors and places of transmission of tuberculosis using a geographical information system (GIS). RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: The 1128 bacteriologically-proven cases of tuberculosis studied over the period 1993-1998 were investigated using spatial epidemiological techniques of exploratory disease mapping. Point pattern analysis and spatial statistics indicated clustering of cases in the areas of high incidence. Significant associations of tuberculosis notifications were found with unemployment, overcrowding and number of shebeens per enumerator sub-district. High tuberculosis notifications with unemployment and its associated poverty emerged as the strongest association.Articl

    Adult-to-child transmission of tuberculosis: Household or community contact?

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    SETTING: If a child develops tuberculosis, it is assumed that the source was an adult infectious case, usually living in the same house. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) was used in this study to establish transmission from source cases to children. DESIGN: Adult and child tuberculosis cases were prospectively identified from 1993 to 1998 and cultures of Mycobacterium tuberculosis collected. Interviews and RFLP analysis of M. tuberculosis strains were performed to establish epidemiological links and to confirm household transmission. RESULTS: Tuberculosis was confirmed by culture in 1139 (91%) of 1291 adults and 65 (16%) of 417 children. Due to problems in recovering specimens or extracting DNA, RFLP analysis was done in 832 adults and 35 children: 19 (54%) children had household members identified with tuberculosis, 12 with the same strain as the child. Twenty-nine (83%) strains from children formed part of community clusters, but definite contact with source cases was established in only 15. CONCLUSION: The presence of an adult with infectious tuberculosis in the same house as a child with tuberculosis does not necessarily imply adult-to-child transmission. Young children may be infected in the community or in the household. These findings have implications for contact tracing and treatment strategies in high incidence areas.Articl

    Adult-to-child transmission of tuberculosis: Household or community contact?

    No full text
    SETTING: If a child develops tuberculosis, it is assumed that the source was an adult infectious case, usually living in the same house. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) was used in this study to establish transmission from source cases to children. DESIGN: Adult and child tuberculosis cases were prospectively identified from 1993 to 1998 and cultures of Mycobacterium tuberculosis collected. Interviews and RFLP analysis of M. tuberculosis strains were performed to establish epidemiological links and to confirm household transmission. RESULTS: Tuberculosis was confirmed by culture in 1139 (91%) of 1291 adults and 65 (16%) of 417 children. Due to problems in recovering specimens or extracting DNA, RFLP analysis was done in 832 adults and 35 children: 19 (54%) children had household members identified with tuberculosis, 12 with the same strain as the child. Twenty-nine (83%) strains from children formed part of community clusters, but definite contact with source cases was established in only 15. CONCLUSION: The presence of an adult with infectious tuberculosis in the same house as a child with tuberculosis does not necessarily imply adult-to-child transmission. Young children may be infected in the community or in the household. These findings have implications for contact tracing and treatment strategies in high incidence areas.Articl

    Historic and recent events contribute to the disease dynamics of Beijing-like Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates in a high incidence region

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    SETTING: A retrospective study in an urban setting with a high tuberculosis incidence. OBJECTIVE: To study the molecular epidemiology and disease dynamics of a prevalent Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain family, F29, a subset of the Beijing strains. DESIGN: Multi-locus DNA fingerprinting and genomic analysis was used to characterise F29 isolates. Demographic and molecular epidemiologic data were correlated with those of other isolates from the setting. The geographic locations of five F29 strain clusters were plotted using a geographic information system (GIS) and an index for geographic distribution was calculated. Their cumulative temporal occurrence was also plotted. RESULTS: The genomic similarity of F29 to the Beijingstrains was confirmed. A high degree of clustering predicted high disease transmission. Spatial distribution was mostly widespread except for one cluster. Smaller foci of transmission were observed. The temporal spread showed ongoing transmission. CONCLUSION: F29 belongs to the Beijing strain group. The prevalence and high degree of strain clustering, with limited geographic clustering, indicates that F29 strains are endemic in the study community. However, recent epidemiologic events also contributed to the disease spread. The combination of molecular epidemiologic, spatial and temporal data has enhanced our understanding of the disease dynamics of Beijing strains in our study community.Articl

    Dulaglutide and cardiovascular outcomes in type 2 diabetes (REWIND): a double-blind, randomised placebo-controlled trial

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