40 research outputs found

    Implementation of a national anti-tuberculosis drug resistance survey in Tanzania

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    A drug resistance survey is an essential public health management tool for evaluating and improving the erformance of National Tuberculosis control programmes. The current manuscript describes the implementation of the first national drug resistance survey in Tanzania. Description of the implementation process of a national anti-tuberculosis drug esistance survey in Tanzania, in relation to the study protocol and Standard Operating Procedures. Factors contributing positively to the implementation of the survey were a continuous commitment of the key stakeholders, the existence of a well organized National Tuberculosis Programme, and a detailed design of cluster-specific arrangements for rapid sputum transportation. Factors contributing negatively to the implementation were a long delay between training and actual survey activities, limited monitoring of activities, and an unclear design of the data capture forms leading to difficulties in form-filling. Careful preparation of the survey, timing of planned activities, a strong emphasis on data capture tools and data management, and timely supervision are essential for a proper implementation of a national drug resistance survey

    Tobacco smoking clusters in households affected by tuberculosis in an individual participant data meta-analysis of national tuberculosis prevalence surveys: Time for household-wide interventions?

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    Tuberculosis (TB) and non-communicable diseases (NCD) share predisposing risk factors. TB-associated NCD might cluster within households affected with TB requiring shared prevention and care strategies. We conducted an individual participant data meta-analysis of national TB prevalence surveys to determine whether NCD cluster in members of households with TB. We identified eligible surveys that reported at least one NCD or NCD risk factor through the archive maintained by the World Health Organization and searching in Medline and Embase from 1 January 2000 to 10 August 2021, which was updated on 23 March 2023. We compared the prevalence of NCD and their risk factors between people who do not have TB living in households with at least one person with TB (members of households with TB), and members of households without TB. We included 16 surveys (n = 740,815) from Asia and Africa. In a multivariable model adjusted for age and gender, the odds of smoking was higher among members of households with TB (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 1.23; 95% CI: 1.11–1.38), compared with members of households without TB. The analysis did not find a significant difference in the prevalence of alcohol drinking, diabetes, hypertension, or BMI between members of households with and without TB. Studies evaluating household-wide interventions for smoking to reduce its dual impact on TB and NCD may be warranted. Systematically screening for NCD using objective diagnostic methods is needed to understand the actual burden of NCD and inform comprehensive interventions

    The impact of the HIV epidemic on tuberculosis transmission in Tanzania

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    OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact of the HIV epidemic on tuberculosis transmission in Tanzania by estimating the trend in annual risk of tuberculosis infection (ARTI) over the period 1983-2003. DESIGN: Tuberculin survey among school children aged 6-14 years, randomly selected by cluster sampling. METHODS: Primary outcome was the ARTI among children without a BCG vaccination scar. To obtain time trends, data were reanalysed from three previous surveys carried out at intervals of 5 years since 1983, using identical methods and definitions. RESULTS: Of 96,226 children included in the analysis (74% of those enrolled), 10,239 (11%) had no BCG scar. The ARTI was 0.68% (95% confidence interval 0.55-0.81). Despite a doubling of notification rates of smear-positive tuberculosis since 1983, this represents an average annual decline since the first survey of 2.7% (P < 0.001). The declining trend in ARTI was observed in 17 of 20 regions, with no association between this trend and region-specific prevalence of HIV infection among patients with tuberculosis (P = 0.575). A similar decline in ARTI was observed among children with a BCG scar and for various ways of estimating the prevalence of tuberculosis infection from the distribution of skin test reactions. CONCLUSION: Despite substantial increases in tuberculosis incidence, the overall population-level effect of the HIV epidemic on tuberculosis transmission in Tanzania has been limited. This suggests that in the presence of a strong control programme, the HIV epidemic has limited impact on tuberculosis transmissio

    Tuberculin skin testing in patients with HIV infection: limited benefit of reduced cutoff values

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    BACKGROUND: When determining eligibility for isoniazid preventive therapy of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients, the cutoff value of the tuberculin skin test (TST) is often reduced from an induration of 10 mm in diameter to one of 5 mm in diameter to compensate for loss of sensitivity. The effectiveness of this reduction depends on the underlying mechanism: a gradual decrease in skin test responsiveness with decreasing immunocompetence or an all-or-nothing switch to complete anergy. No published studies have assessed this directly in patients with tuberculosis. METHODS: We performed a cross-sectional study of TST responses and HIV infection among patients with sputum smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis in 6 hospitals in Tanzania. Skin test anergy was defined as a TST reaction < or =2 mm in diameter. RESULTS: Of 991 patients with complete results, 451 (45.5%) had HIV infection. Anergy was observed in 111 (24.6%) of 451 HIV-infected patients and 18 (3.3%) of 540 HIV-uninfected patients (P <.001). The reaction size distributions among nonanergic HIV-infected and uninfected patients showed a limited difference (mean diameter +/- standard deviation, 15.9 +/- 5.0 mm and 16.8 +/- 3.8 mm, respectively; P=.048). The sensitivity of the TST among HIV-uninfected patients was 91.1% at a cutoff value of 10 mm and 95.2% at a cutoff value of 5 mm. The sensitivity of the TST among HIV-infected patients was 64.3% at a cutoff value of 10 mm and 71.2% at a cutoff value of 5 mm; the sensitivity of the TST was 67.6% and 74.5%, respectively, after adjustment for tuberculosis-specific anergy. CONCLUSION: In subjects with tuberculosis disease and HIV infection, loss of TST sensitivity is predominantly attributable to anergy (i.e., an all-or-nothing phenomenon). The decrease in the proportion of false-negative TST results obtained by reducing the cutoff value from 10 mm to 5 mm is limite

    PRISMA-IPD checklist of items to include when reporting a systematic review and meta-analysis of individual participant data (IPD).

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    PRISMA-IPD checklist of items to include when reporting a systematic review and meta-analysis of individual participant data (IPD).</p
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