The impact of HIV infection on tuberculosis transmission in a country with low tuberculosis incidence: a national retrospective study using molecular epidemiology
Background: HIV is known to increase the likelihood of reactivation of latent tuberculosis to active TB disease;
however, its impact on tuberculosis infectiousness and consequent transmission is unclear, particularly in lowincidence settings.
Methods: National surveillance data from England, Wales and Northern Ireland on tuberculosis cases in adults from
2010 to 2014, strain typed using 24-locus mycobacterial-interspersed-repetitive-units–variable-number-tandem-repeats
was used retrospectively to identify clusters of tuberculosis cases, subdivided into ‘first’ and ‘subsequent’ cases.
Firstly, we used zero-inflated Poisson regression models to examine the association between HIV status and the
number of subsequent clustered cases (a surrogate for tuberculosis infectiousness) in a strain type cluster. Secondly, we
used logistic regression to examine the association between HIV status and the likelihood of being a subsequent case
in a cluster (a surrogate for recent acquisition of tuberculosis infection) compared to the first case or a non-clustered
case (a surrogate for reactivation of latent infection).
Results: We included 18,864 strain-typed cases, 2238 were the first cases of clusters and 8471 were subsequent cases.
Seven hundred and fifty-nine (4%) were HIV-positive.
Outcome 1: HIV-positive pulmonary tuberculosis cases who were the first in a cluster had fewer subsequent cases
associated with them (mean 0.6, multivariable incidence rate ratio [IRR] 0.75 [0.65–0.86]) than those HIV-negative
(mean 1.1).
Extra-pulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) cases with HIV were less likely to be the first case in a cluster compared to HIVnegative EPTB cases. EPTB cases who were the first case had a higher mean number of subsequent cases (mean 2.5,
IRR (3.62 [3.12–4.19]) than those HIV-negative (mean 0.6).
Outcome 2: tuberculosis cases with HIV co-infection were less likely to be a subsequent case in a cluster (odds ratio 0.82 [0.69–0.98]), compared to being the first or a non-clustered case.
Conclusions: Outcome 1: pulmonary tuberculosis-HIV patients were less infectious than those without HIV. EPTB
patients with HIV who were the first case in a cluster had a higher number of subsequent cases and thus may be
markers of other undetected cases, discoverable by contact investigations.
Outcome 2: tuberculosis in HIV-positive individuals was more likely due to reactivation than recent infection, compared
to those who were HIV-negative